[PDF] Metropolitan Phoenix Arizona eBook

Metropolitan Phoenix Arizona Book in PDF, ePub and Kindle version is available to download in english. Read online anytime anywhere directly from your device. Click on the download button below to get a free pdf file of Metropolitan Phoenix Arizona book. This book definitely worth reading, it is an incredibly well-written.

Metropolitan Phoenix

Author : Patricia Gober
Publisher : University of Pennsylvania Press
Page : 244 pages
File Size : 47,94 MB
Release : 2013-02-12
Category : Social Science
ISBN : 0812205820

GET BOOK

Inhabitants of Phoenix tend to think small but live big. They feel connected to individual neighborhoods and communities but drive farther to get to work, feel the effects of the regional heat island, and depend in part for their water on snow packs in Wyoming. In Metropolitan Phoenix, Patricia Gober explores the efforts to build a sustainable desert city in the face of environmental uncertainty, rapid growth, and increasing social diversity. Metropolitan Phoenix chronicles the burgeoning of this desert community, including the audacious decisions that created a metropolis of 3.6 million people in a harsh and demanding physical setting. From the prehistoric Hohokam, who constructed a thousand miles of irrigation canals, to the Euro-American farmers, who converted the dryland river valley into an agricultural paradise at the end of the nineteenth century, Gober stresses the sense of beginning again and building anew that has been deeply embedded in wave after wave of human migration to the region. In the early twentieth century, the so-called health seekers—asthmatics, arthritis and tuberculosis sufferers—arrived with the hope of leading more vigorous lives in the warm desert climate, while the postwar period drew veterans and their families to the region to work in emerging electronics and defense industries. Most recently, a new generation of elderly, seeking "active retirement," has settled into planned retirement communities on the perimeter of the city. Metropolitan Phoenix also tackles the future of the city. The passage of a recent transportation initiative, efforts to create a biotechnology incubator, and growing publicity about water shortages and school funding have placed Phoenix at a crossroads, forcing its citizens to grapple with the issues of social equity, environmental quality, and economic security. Gober argues that given Phoenix's dramatic population growth and enormous capacity for change, it can become a prototype for twenty-first-century urbanization, reconnecting with its desert setting and building a multifaceted sense of identity that encompasses the entire metropolitan community.

Glimpses of Phoenix

Author : David William Foster
Publisher : McFarland
Page : 209 pages
File Size : 31,6 MB
Release : 2013-04-19
Category : History
ISBN : 1476602212

GET BOOK

Part of the self-image of Phoenix is that the city has no history and that anything of importance happened yesterday. Also that Phoenix, the Arizona state capital, is a "clean" city (despite a past of police corruption and social oppression). The "real" Phoenix, easygoing, sun-drenched, a place of ever-expanding development and economic growth, guarantees, it is said, an enviable lifestyle, low taxes, and unfettered personal freedom and opportunity. Little of this is true. Phoenix has been described as one of the least sustainable cities in the country. This sixth largest urban area of the United States has an alarmingly superficial and tourism-oriented discourse among its leaders. This book examines a series of narrative works (novels, theater, chronicles, investigative reporting, personal accounts, editorial cartooning, even a children's television program) that question this discourse in a frequently stinging fashion. The works examined are anchored in a critical understanding of the dominant urban myths of Greater Phoenix, and an awareness of how all the newness, modernity and fun-in-the-sun mentality mask a uniquely dystopian human experience.

Phoenix Metropolitan Street Atlas

Author : Phoenix Mapping Service
Publisher : Wide World of Maps, Incorporated
Page : 130 pages
File Size : 34,45 MB
Release : 2003
Category : History
ISBN : 9781887749381

GET BOOK

Discovering Greater Phoenix

Author : Bradford Luckingham
Publisher :
Page : 352 pages
File Size : 35,62 MB
Release : 1998
Category : History
ISBN : 9781886483255

GET BOOK

A portrait of Phoenix, Arizona, covers the city's history, cultural events, business community, and government, along with overviews of nearby Tempe, Mesa, and Scottsdale, accompanied by hundreds of historical photographs and modern glossy prints.

Phoenix Area's Parks and Preserves

Author : Donna Hartz
Publisher : Arcadia Library Editions
Page : 130 pages
File Size : 12,25 MB
Release : 2007-09-01
Category : History
ISBN : 9781531630287

GET BOOK

Metropolitan Phoenix is one of the country's fastest growing areas, contains the nation's fifth largest city, adds more than 100,000 residents each year, and rapidly consumes the surrounding desert. However, it is not losing all of its open space. One can stand anywhere in the Valley of the Sun and look toward the horizon--in just about any direction the glories of nearly 100 years of preservation efforts are visible. All told, over 300 square miles of the most beautiful desert and mountain scenery are preserved or targeted for preservation in the Phoenix area. This book celebrates the beauty of these special places, and the foresight, determination, and efforts required to preserve this critical link to the great outdoors. Using more than a century's worth of historical photographs, it tells the stories of the acquisition and development of seven of the Phoenix area's most important parks and preserves.

The Phoenix Area's Parks and Preserves

Author : Donna Hartz
Publisher : Arcadia Publishing
Page : 132 pages
File Size : 41,5 MB
Release : 2007
Category : History
ISBN : 9780738548869

GET BOOK

Metropolitan Phoenix is one of the country's fastest growing areas, contains the nation's fifth largest city, adds more than 100,000 residents each year, and rapidly consumes the surrounding desert. However, it is not losing all of its open space. One can stand anywhere in the Valley of the Sun and look toward the horizon--in just about any direction the glories of nearly 100 years of preservation efforts are visible. All told, over 300 square miles of the most beautiful desert and mountain scenery are preserved or targeted for preservation in the Phoenix area. This book celebrates the beauty of these special places, and the foresight, determination, and efforts required to preserve this critical link to the great outdoors. Using more than a century's worth of historical photographs, it tells the stories of the acquisition and development of seven of the Phoenix area's most important parks and preserves.