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Tokyo: An Urban Portrait
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07 July 2020

Tokyo’s seemingly endless sea of buildings has grown incrementally over
the past centuries, leading to an urban condition that is both coherent
and contradictory at the same time. The understanding of Tokyo as a
continuous and interdependent urban complex is a much-neglected
perspective in previous readings of the city.
An attachment to the land,
strong civic commitment, and a deep appreciation of the immaterial has
produced a nested megastructure of smaller communities. These places
have all evolved in a related way, briefly and temporarily disrupted by
earthquakes and a devastating war. Over time, a set of distinct urban
patterns emerged through centralization processes, the “manshon
urbanization,” the relocation of various types of manufacturing, and
other developments.
What might appear homogeneous in composition and
rhythm is in fact a configuration of distinctly different spaces,
created by the routines of everyday life that make the district of
Shinjuku different from Shimokitazawa or Kitamoto.
This book not only
provides the first comprehensive reading of the many urbanization
processes shaping Tokyo today, but also seeks an entirely new approach
for looking at megacity regions: through their differences, and the way
those differences are are produced in the course of everyday life.