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New Book: "Monotown Urban: Dreams Brutal Imperatives" by Clayton Strange

United States Architecture News - Aug 15, 2019 - 02:48   11118 views

New Book:

Applied Research + Design Publishing has released a new book written by Clayton Strange, who is an architect, urbanist, and educator. He is currently a Design Critic at the Harvard Graduate School of Design (GSD) where he holds a Master of Architecture in Urban Design with Distinction.

Titled Monotown: Urban Dreams Brutal Imperatives, the book examines the post-industrial transformation and transnational legacy of planned single-industry towns which emerged as a distinctive sociopolitical project of urbanization in the Soviet Union during the 1920s. 

Monotowns took form through the teleological establishment of industrial enterprises strewn across remote parts of the Siberian hinterland and entailed the relocation of vast populations requiring services, housing, and social and physical infrastructure, all linked to a given town’s productive apparatus. 

New Book:

Today, having outlasted the political and economic systems which made them viable, many have become shrinking towns with graying populations and obsolete enterprises, even as they are subjected to considerable national investment and commanded to grow in order to catalyze their respective regions. Given this implied imperative for transformation, the work goes on to explore the largely overlooked legacy of the Monotown as a model of urbanization that was deployed upon remote geographies of China and India through Soviet-aided industrial development projects. By exploring the etymology of the Monotown over time in this expanded field, the work establishes a broader yet more specific dialogue about this model’s complex legacy and future.

Clayton Strange is also the founding principal of Strange Works, a Boston-based research and design office.

You can buy the book for $45.00 from here.  

Book facts:

ISBN:  978-1-939621-57-3
Binding: Hard Bound
Pages: 280pp
Publication Date: Fall 2019
Size:  7” x 10.5” Portrait
World Rights: Available

All images courtesy of Applied Research + Design Publishing

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