Postmodernism
- Cities are dynamic and work at evolving to new space and form
- Many cities, particularly HDE’s, are moving away from the typical patterns of functional land use and architectural uniformity of the post-industrial/globalised urban form
- These post-modern western cities, are focused on service and knowledge, with a return of middle-income people from the suburbs into city centres
- It accompanies gentrification, upgrades to old or rundown housing and heritage quarters into trendy, flagship homes and developments
- Demolishing of ‘older’ parts of a city’s core to replace with new cores or self-contained, gated (fortress) urban developments to reduce car usage and emissions
- It attempts to emphasise new ideas in design, living space and community but social and economic inequalities are growing
- All cities have elements of post-modernism e.g. the Gherkin and Cheesegrater in London, the Guggenheim Museum in Bilbao or 'Antilia', a private home in South Mumbai and 'The Imperial', a twin-tower skyscraper in Mumbai