Rowman & Littlefield Publishers
Pages: 296
Trim: 6⅜ x 9¼
978-1-5381-2671-4 • Hardback • February 2020 • $36.00 • (£30.00)
978-1-5381-2672-1 • eBook • February 2020 • $34.00 • (£25.00)
Jeff Dondero has diverse experience in writing, ranging from web content, B2B, books, hard news, and interviews to feature writing. He began his career as stringer and freelancer for the San Francisco Examiner, worked as a reporter and editor for several suburban newspapers, was the entertainment editor for The Marin Independent Journal, a writer and editor for various magazines, and wrote for KTVU-TV in the San Francisco Bay Area. He toiled in a trade magazine mill, and created a website dedicated to sustainable construction industries (http://www.greenbuildingdigest.net). He was invited as a writer-in-residence at the art colony in Rancho Vista, Arizona, in 2014, where he wrote a slim volume of poetry and researched book ideas. He continues to expand his national readership with books, social media, his own blogs and website. He is the author of The Energy Wise Home and The Energy Wise Workplace, as well as Throwaway Nation.
Preface
Acknowledgments and Disclaimer
Chapter 1: Seeking Supercities: Surroundings, Settings, and Situations
Chapter 2: Habitats for Inhabitants: Home Is Where the Heart, Hearth, and Habitat Are
Chapter 3: Burrowing Beneath the Earth: Tomorrow’s Troglodytes
Chapter 4: Going Back to the Sea: Back to Our Beginnings
Chapter 5: Settlements Above the Sky: Cities in Space
Chapter 6: The Most Important Color in Supercities: Getting Green
Chapter 7: Bleeding-Edge Building Materials: If You Build It, They Will Come
Chapter 8: Getting Somewhere from Someplace: New Age Transportation
Chapter 9: Priorities for Power: Sustainables That Keep On Giving
Chapter 10: Provisioning the Populace: Resourcing Resources
Chapter 11: Smart City Systems: AI and Automation
Chapter 12: Super Skyscrapers: How High Can We Go?
Chapter 13: New Use for Refuse: Gold in Garbage
Chapter 14: Cautionary Comments on Climate Change: How to Cope
Notes
About the Author
This book is a non-technical yet provocative exploration of possibilities for future cities using resources more creatively and efficiently.
— Robin King, Director, Knowledge Capture and Collaboration, World Resources Institute Ross Center for Sustainable Cities