This review was originally posted on Spacing National.
Author: David Sim (Island Press, 2019)
Bringing the soft back to cities
Cities are often caricatured as hard and harsh. Concrete, steel, loud noises, crowds and congestion, bright lights, fast speeds, isolated people. With the increasing focus on ‘smart cities’, we are in danger of adding another layer of technocracy to our cities, further adding to their hardness and social isolation.
David Sim’s book, Soft City, provides a counterpoint to this version of the city. The book makes the case for a human-scale “soft city” that emphasizes the design of our built environment to promote human movement, interaction, and comfort. It promotes a diversity of building types and thoughtful urban design to ensure a resilient urban environment and society. In Sim’s eyes, a “‘soft city’ is a human-centered city; one that adapts to the needs of its residents and visitors in order to accommodate the pleasures of everyday life.”
It’s about density and diversity
Soft City makes a case for density and diversity at a human scale. Rather than thinking about cities as a collection of buildings and infrastructure, Sim thinks about them as a series of relationships: between people and place, people and planet, and people and other people. He believes cities are not simply a collection of buildings, but rather the interactions that they promote.
According to the author, “we see an increasing need for living densely and with that comes sets of contradictions between privacy, sociability, economic efficiency and spatial design.” The book seeks to balance such contradictions by suggesting simple, low-tech, low-cost, small-scale, human-centred solutions to improve everyday urban life, and help address some of our current human challenges, from the climate emergency to the rise in political polarization.
Reconnecting people to place, planet, and other people
Drawing on works by the likes of Jane Jacobs, Christopher Alexander and Jan Gehl, Soft City carries on the proud tradition of these urbanist luminaries. From a foreword by Jan Gehl through its nine chapters, the book persuasively outlines how our cities can be softened through urban interventions at a human scale. Throughout the book, Sim shares specific examples of how to make any city more efficient, more livable, and better connected to the environment through a collection of accessible, ‘doable’ solutions that can help reconnect people to places, our planet, and—other people. By creating opportunities for social interaction and urban propinquity, these ideas can help soften the edges of our hard cities.
“Rather than one big idea or one single solution, it’s a story of 1000 small steps towards improving people’s quality of life.”
David Sim
The book concludes by outlining nine important criteria for dense livable cities, each accompanied by tangible solutions. These measures include density at a human scale, flexibility and responsiveness, diversity of public spaces and built forms, a sense of social identity and control, accessibility and contentedness, micro-climates, increased biodiversity, and a smaller carbon footprint.
Rather than a book you sit down and read, Soft City is a book that invites you to explore what it has to offer. It is highly visual, filled with primary colours, useful case studies, original ideas, inspiring photographs, and helpful graphics. As such, it is highly recommended that you forgo the e-book version and get yourself a physical copy.
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David Sim is Creative Director at Gehl where he champions people-first urban strategies and design work worldwide. His knowledge of human-scale cities have made him a leader in the push for more equitable, healthy and sustainable urban environments.
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For more information visit the Island Press website.