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List of contents
Foreword
Chan Heng Chee
Acknowledgements
The Contributors
Chapter 1 Planning Singapore: Challenges and Choices
Stephen Hamnett and Belinda Yuen
Chapter 2 Re-examining Singapore’s Urban Planning and Governance
Framework
Tan Shin Bin and Donald Low
Chapter 3 Singapore’s Economic Development: The Dilemma of Managing
Success
John Powers
Chapter 4 More than just a Roof over One’s Head: Lifestyle Diversity and
Dynamics in Singapore Public Housing
Tan Ern Ser and Paveena Seah
Chapter 5 Nature in the City 1
Lena Chan
Chapter 6 Recycling Water and Waste in Singapore
Corinne Ong, Lyle Fearnley, Quek Ri An and Chia Siow Boon
Chapter 7 The Challenge of Climate Change for Singapore
Peter Newman
Chapter 8 Singapore’s Changing Relationship with Cars
Paul Barter
Chapter 9 Singapore’s Integrated Transit-Oriented Planning and Land
Value Capture: A Model for Others?
John Good
Chapter 10 Planning the Experimental City
Belinda Yuen and Stephen Hamnett
Index
About the author
Stephen Hamnett is Emeritus Professor of Urban and Regional Planning at the University of South Australia and a Commissioner of the Environment, Resources and Development Court of South Australia.
Belinda Yuen is Professorial Research Fellow and Research Director at the Lee Kuan Yew Centre for Innovative Cities, Singapore University of Technology and Design.
Summary
Stephen Hamnett and Belinda Yuen have brought together a set of chapters on Singapore’s planning achievements, aspirations and challenges, which are united in their focus on what might happen next in the planning of the island-state.
Additional text
Planning Singapore: The Experimental City is a comprehensive expert analysis of contemporary Singapore by experienced urbanists. A democratic authoritarian government has guided Singapore’s urban development with exceptional success, transitioning Singapore into a significant global city. It has successfully provided housing to a large proportion of the population. In parallel the Singapore economy has grown steadily with the support of government firms and foreign multinationals. Challenges include a slowly emerging gig economy, growing social inequality and a need for enhanced opportunity for creativity and innovation. The authors have provided a readable, nuanced, assessment of a well planned global hub.
Dean Forbes
Matthew Flinders Distinguished Professor Emeritus
Flinders University, Adelaide, South Australia
Now two centuries since Raffles planted the British flag on the site of the ancient kingdom of Temasek, we know for certain that his instincts about the island’s potential greatness were correct. The experts that Hamnett and Yuen have assembled in Planning Singapore: The Experimental City enable us to understand how Singapore’s unique and highly integrated planning and governance approach, with its experimental qualities, will guide its future.
Christopher Silver
Professor
Urban and Regional Planning
University of Florida, Gainesville
This is an important reference point for urban planning students and researchers alike. It tells much of the Singapore story so far in a concise and informative way but it also includes important elements of reflection on and criticism of its meaning for urban planning elsewhere and signposts some of the likely future twists and turns in this remarkable tale.
Nicholas A. Phelps, Urban Policy and Research, November 2019