The Possible City: Exercises in Dreaming Philadelphia
Popkin has written an evocative and provocative portrait of a great but flawed city. It is defiant and fierce and filled with the power and potential of urban life. It should be read by anyone who loves cities and dreams of making them better.
Richard C. Scragger, professor of Law, University of Virginia
“Without revolution, industry, or influence,” says author Nathaniel Popkin, “Philadelphia lives on by invention.” Here, in the loving hand of the city planner-turned-writer, is the architecture of Philadelphia's current reinvention: its beguiling founding ideals, the physical ruins of its might and the search, amidst rowhouse streets, for elevation, for an open city that delights, inspires and performs.
About the Author
Nathaniel Popkin has degrees in urban studies and city planning and has been writing about cities for twenty years. He is the author of Song of the City.