Green Metropolis: What the City Can Teach the Country About True Sustainability
Written by David Owen
Narrated by Patrick Lawlor
4/5
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About this audiobook
These achievements are not accidents. Spreading people thinly across the countryside may make them feel green, but it doesn't reduce the damage they do to the environment. In fact, it increases the damage, while also making the problems they cause harder to see and to address. Owen contends that the environmental problem we face, at the current stage of our assault on the world's nonrenewable resources, is not how to make teeming cities more like the pristine countryside. The problem is how to make other settled places more like Manhattan, whose residents presently come closer than any other Americans to meeting environmental goals that all of us, eventually, will have to come to terms with.
David Owen
David Owen plays in a weekly foursome, takes mulligans off the first tee, practices intermittently at best, wore a copper wristband because Steve Ballesteros said so, and struggles for consistency even though his swing is consistent -- just mediocre. He is a staff writer for The New Yorker, a contributing editor to Golf Digest, and a frequent contributor to The Atlantic Monthly. His other books include The First National Bank of Dad, The Chosen One, The Making of the Masters, and My Usual Game. He lives in Washington, Connecticut.
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Reviews for Green Metropolis
49 ratings6 reviews
- Rating: 2 out of 5 stars2/5While in general Owen's thesis is good and I agree with him, I have so many gripes with the book and the conclusions he reaches that I had a hard time listening to this book.
First, the book was at least 5 hours longer than it needed to be. It gets super repetitive.
Second, he seems to have a very distinct anger towards environmentalists. since he didn't stop criticising them as if they were the most clueless, the most hypocritical and incompetent kind of people ever.
Third, he has a holier-than-thou attitude that makes the tone of the book quite obnoxious to listen to.
Fourth, he seems to have the right idea but reaches the wrong conclusions. For instance, in once chapter he talks about how it is good for the environment that there are car congestions because that makes people want to use public transit. That is the silliest thing I ever heard. First, there is plenty of reasons why people use transit, not only because of traffic, and you can also incentivise use of transit by reducing the amount of lanes on the street and making it easier for pedestrians and bikes to take part in said street. To his credit he mentions this two chapters later, but that doesn't erase the fact that he said that it was "good for the environment" that cars were sitting in traffic, putting out toxic fumes.
Fifth, a lot of the things he uses to prove a point come from anecdotal, very personal opinions, like how his daughter used to love going for walks in the city as a baby but hated the countryside because it was too sparse and boring, ergo it's false that people like walking around the countryside. Also, him and his neighbours don't really walk that much, so it is a lie that people in the country like going for walks (he does provide some sources for this claim, but it seems to stem more from the fact that suburbs need to depend less on cars rather than on people being hypocritical).
Sixth, speaking of hypocritical, he does not live in the city, but rather in a suburb, and has 3 cars and drives everywhere. Not only that, but argues that if he were to leave, someone else would be doing the same thing he is, so what's the point of moving back to the city.
So he spent 11 hours pontificating about how New York is the best and has all the answers to solving environmental issues that the suburbs need to enact, but in the end it didn't seem like he was advocating for the town he lives in to change. Just complaining and saying the city is better.
He did have some things I agree with, of course, common sense things. Pedestrians and cyclists need to be included when planning; traffic calming are good measures; density leads to more sustainable urban design. But he spends too much time saying how much better NYC is, how oil is here to stay and there is no point in trying to work out new energy sources and how more fuel efficient cars are worse for the environment since they incentivise driving more. Bro.
Anyway. I was very annoyed by this book. - Rating: 5 out of 5 stars5/5Eloquently addresses misconceptions about the greenness of dense urban cores. Americas greatest strength to combating climate change is often viewed as it's greatest ill.
- Rating: 3 out of 5 stars3/5I knew I would enjoy this book because I already believe that urban living is more sustainable and energy efficient. But, I found it REALLY annoying to be told that by someone who lives in a suburban / rural area and drives places that are a mile away.
- Rating: 3 out of 5 stars3/5Owen makes a very compelling case for cities as the most environmentally friendly places to live and work due to the efficiencies of living closer, sharing resources, and reducing travel with New York City as the key example. I'm already sold on the idea but he piles on the evidence for his theory in a way that I hope convinces other people who have the ingrained idea of cities as dirty places. He also takes on the pastoral vision of many environmental movements and "LEED brain" where new construction is rewarded for fancy add-ons that are not good for the environment especially when compared to simple renovations of existing buildings. I'm less sold on his opposition to things like the locavore movement which is as much built on nutrition and local sustainability as environmentalism. He's also opposed to vertical agriculture because he thinks it would interfere with the connectivity of cities, but I think they'd fit in perfectly replacing underused light industrial and warehouse districts that already exist in cities like New York. I'm also not sold on his cop-out argument for continuing to live in a drafty farmhouse in suburban Connecticut where he believes if he moved to New York someone less environmentally aware would occupy his current house. Nits picked, I still think this book is a great argument for an idea whose time has come.Favorite Passages:"Jefferson…embodied the ethos of suburbia. Indeed, he could be considered the prototype of the modern American suburbanite, since for most of his life he lived far outside the central city in a house that was much too big, and he was deeply enamored of high-tech gadgetry and of buying on impulse and on credit, and he embraced a self-perpetuating cycle of conspicuous consumption and recreational self-improvement. The standard object of the modern American dream, the single-family home surrounded by grass, is a mini-Monticello" (p. 25)Making automobiles more fuel-efficient isn’t necessarily a bad idea, but it won’t solve the world’s energy and environmental dilemmas. The real problem with cars is not that they don’t get enough miles to the gallon; it’s that they make it too easy for people to spread out, encouraging forms of development that are inherently wasteful and damaging. Most so-called environmental initiatives concerning automobiles are actually counterproductive, because their effect is to make driving less expensive (by reducing the need for fuel) and to make car travel more agreeable (by eliminating congestion). In terms of both energy conservation and environmental protection, we need to make driving costlier and less pleasant. This is true for cars powered by recycled cooking oil and those powered by gasoline. In terms of the automobile’s true environmental impact, fuel gauges are less important than odometers. In the long run, miles matter more than miles per gallon.The near certainty is that, for many years to come, what the market will replace oil with is not something better (such as nuclear fusion, which, at the very least, is decades or generations away) but something considerably worse (such as low-grade coal, China’s main fuel, which makes oil’s carbon footprint and pollution profile look demure), and that ordinary market forces, rather than leading us inexorably toward a golden future, will most likely entice us to compound our growing troubles by prompting us to invest heavily in the energy equivalents of patent medicines (such as shale oil and ethanol). Sometimes, the invisible hand goes for the throat.
- Rating: 4 out of 5 stars4/5This is well researched and written and focused on key issues central to building a sustainable culture. The neglected issue of population density is most prominent, but the author also covers many other related issues and debunks many widely held myths about sustainability, such as the high relative priority we currently give to recycling, mass transit and various high-tech schemes for salvation. Owen maintains that Manhattan's population density is in part an accident due to a favorable geography. Some more discussion of how to retrofit existing urban centers to emulate Manhattan, by design, would have also been useful.
- Rating: 3 out of 5 stars3/5Found this to be a quick and not particularly enlightening read. Owen's thesis, essentially, is the obvious: living in a smaller space, close to amenities and your workplace, reduces your carbon footprint. My greatest quibble with this book is that it is very, very American. There are no specific international examples used, aside from vague mentions of Europe’s superiority. Using one example, in this case NYC, to illustrate your argument is never terribly effective and I would have respected Owen much more if he had drawn on further examples. I was also disappointed by the lack of productive suggestions expressed in the conclusion.