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Auteur
Zahra Ebrahim is an urbanist, educator, and strategist. Her award-winning work focuses on building bridges between institutions and their public, working with communities to co-design towards better social outcomes and leading some of Canada’s most ambitious participatory infrastructure and policy programs. She currently co-leads Monumental, a national organization focused on projects that advance fair, just, and culturally competent citybuilding, with previous experience leading organizations across multiple sectors. She is currently an Adjunct Professor at the Daniels School of Architecture and Urbanist-in-Residence at the University of Toronto’s School of Cities. She currently lives in Toronto with her partner, and their whippet, Zada.
John Lorinc is a Toronto-based journalist and editor. He writes about cities, climate, and cleantech for a range of publications, including the Globe and Mail, Toronto Star, Corporate Knights and Spacing, where he is senior editor. John is also the Toronto non-fiction editor for Coach House Books, and has edited or co-edited several uTOpia anthologies, including The Ward, Any Other Way, and House Divided. He is the author of five books, including Dream States: Smart Cities, Technology and the Pursuit of Urban Utopias, which won the 2023 Writer's Trust Balsillie Prize for Public Policy. John's latest book is a family memoir entitled No Jews Live Here (Coach House, 2024).
Dylan Reid is a co-founder and now the executive editor of Spacing magazine, an award-winning print quarterly about Toronto urbanism and public space that recently celebrated its 20th anniversary. He is the author of the Toronto Public Etiquette Guide and co-editor of other books about Toronto. He was co-chair of the city government’s Toronto Pedestrian Committee and later co-founder of the advocacy group Walk Toronto. He is also a fellow at the Centre for Renaissance and Reformation Studies at the University of Toronto, and author of several scholarly articles about the history of cities in Renaissance France.
Leslie Woo is a dynamic tri-sector athlete known for her expertise in uniting public, private, and not-for-profit leaders to co-create innovative urban policy solutions. With over 30 years of experience as an urban planner, architect, and community activator, she has been central to shaping urban development in Canada’s largest metropolis. Leslie serves on the boards of Waterfront Toronto and the Yee Hong Centre for Geriatric Care and is a trustee of the Urban Land Institute. A Senior Fellow at the University of Toronto’s Munk School of Global Affairs and Public Policy, Leslie champions women city builders on her blog.
Texte du rabat
Would our cities be more lively, more liveable, if we broke the rules more often?
Crowded streets, sidewalk vendors, jumbled architecture, constant clamor, graffitied walls, parks gone wild: are these signs of a poorly managed city or indicators of urban vitality?
Messy Cities: Why We Can’t Plan Everything argues that messiness is not a liability but an essential element in all thriving cities. Forty essays by a range of writers from around the world illuminate the role of messy urbanism in enabling creativity, enterprise, and grassroots initiatives to flourish within dense modern cities.
With pieces on guerrilla gardening, facadism, queer ecology, and decolonizing public engagement written by experts from all walks of life, Messy Cities makes the case for embracing disorder while not shying away from confronting its challenges.
Contenu
Contents & Contributors
Introduction – Dylan Reid
Dixie Road – Fadi Masoud
These Walls, These Roads – Ameer Idreis
Designing out Disorder – Cara Chellew
From Loud to Lively – Leslie Woo
Mexico City's Jumbled Apartment Buildings – Daniel Gordon
Flexible Streets – Dylan Reid
Satisfying Our Thirst for Agency – Colin Ellard
The Collective Effervence of Messy Parks – Jake Tobin Garrett
Industrial Land's Secret Sauce – Karen Chapple
A Food Map of Toronto – Karon Lui
A Beach Like No Other – Shari Kasman
Sports and Spaces – Perry King
Leave the Leaves – Lorraine Johnson
Interruptions – Zahra Ebrahim
The Readable City – Shawn Micallef 
Beyond the Lawn: Meadow or Mess? – Nina-Marie Lister
Planning for an Unplanned City – Jason Thorne
A Farewell to El Gran Burritov – John Kamp and James Rojas
Banquet Halls and Belonging – Sneha Mandhan
Tokyo: The Quintessentially Messy City? – Andre Sorensen
The Ballet of the Parking Lot – Brendan Stewart and Daniel Rotsztain
We Can Live With That – Leslie Woo
Tower Communities Are What We Make Them – Ajeev Bhatia
The Case Against Controlling Infrastructure – Andrés Borthagaray
An Argument Worth Having – Chiyi Tam
Everything is Everything But The Details Matter – Alexandra Lambropoulos and Sami Ferwati 
Hidden Struggles – Eileen De Villa
Cities for Women and Girls – Elsa Marie D'Silva
Non-humans (Heard and Unheard) – Suzanne Kite and Robbie Wing
Cape Town's Rastafarians – Kofi Hope
Conjay's First Walk Home – Tura Cousins Wilson and Shane Laptiste
Another Fine Mess on Regionalism – Sabine Matheson
The Palimpset of Heritage Streetscapes – Tatum Taylor Chaubal 
Protecting a Queer Beach – Wesley Reibeling
Public Health in the Post-COVID Era – Andrew Boozary
Why Can't We Sell Stuff Anyplace? – John Lorinc
The Messy Culture of Graffiti – Dylan Reid
An Indigenous Take on the 15 Minute City – Carolynne Crawley
Thinking Twice about Consultation – Lorne Cappe
What is safety?  – Kimahli Powell
Conclusion – Dylan Reid, Leslie Woo, Zahra Ebrahim, and John Lorinc