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Throughout the 20th century we have been moving from town to urban. The dense European town is spreading out, initially in a regular fashion (suburbs) but now more and more in a multi-centric way (dynamic and lively urban centres organised as archipelagos which are themselves extending through zones of dense private housing). Extended towns cover a growing proportion of the land and, at the same time, are becoming more diverse and complex, even fragmented. We no longer live where we work, our consumption is done in yet another place, our friends are far away, and we have multiple social allegiances The greater spread of our towns has, at the same time, increased agglomerations but weakened the 'city'. Several town centres, a suburb and several peripheral communities cohabit in a multi-centric urban area with three driving forces; three town policies that tend to ignore each other:
Describing urban areas in terms of continuity rather than discontinuity (a town with no clear limits), with as much movement as there is space, is a significant change in our thinking. It is accompanied by the development of fixed and mobile networks and is well suited to globalisation. However, urbanisation and urban spread were occurring almost everywhere before economic globalisation started. Global companies need a limited number of world decision and exchange centres but production and distribution easily follow populations: the growth of Phoenix in the USA or the coastal areas in France obey individual location decisions as much as, or even more than, those of capitalists - who then adapt to them. The spread of business around the world requires that new 'centres' are reconstituted, the 'world towns', that concentrate the functions of direction, innovation and research and are organised in networks where each centre acts as a node of interlinking and commutation between multiple networks: Paris-La Défense, the West End in London, Manhattan (and not New York), Singapore, Hong Kong, which also have stronger relations between themselves than with their immediate neighbours. These centres carry other medium sized towns along with them but also leave others on one side. This networking is also a process of marginalisation and exclusion, of ranking and fragmentation of areas.
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