The Ultimate Antiplanning Book Is Out!

The Best-Laid Plans is officially being released today. If you didn’t stand in line at your bookstore until midnight last night to be the first to get your copy, there are probably still a few copies available at Amazon, Barnes & Noble, Powell’s, or whatever your favorite bookstore is. (Powell’s is already offering used copies — they must be review copies sent out by the publisher.)

Readers of the Washington Post know that it was reviewed in last Sunday’s edition. I’m not sure the reviewers actually read the book, as the two paragraphs they wrote ask a couple of questions that were answered in the introduction. But I’m told it is rare for the Post to review a book published by Cato, so anything is better than nothing.

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The Antiplanner’s Library: The Ultimate Antiplanning Book

From time to time, the Antiplanner has reviewed books that seemed worthy of inclusion in an antiplanner’s library, or at least worth knowing about. Now the time has come to announce the ultimate antiplanning book, one specifically aimed at repealing all government planning laws.

Click the image to see the full cover in all its glory (287 KB).

Yes, the Cato Institute is releasing The Best-Laid Plans, written by the Antiplanner himself. The book covers all the issues discussed in the Antiplanner blog, including forest planning, urban planning, and transportation planning. But the book’s theme is not that there is something wrong with these specific kinds of plans but that government planning itself — that is, comprehensive, long-range planning by government agencies who often don’t own the resources being planned — cannot work and should not be attempted.

Best of all, the back cover of the book presents a beautiful photo of the Antiplanner’s favorite dog, Chip. Just ignore that old guy teetering next to him, who probably got in the photo by accident.

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The Antiplanners’ Library: The Edifice Complex

What makes politicians and planners try to design and control entire cities? Architecture critic Deyan Sudjic argues that it is a combination of “excess, egotism, and greed” (p. 325). His book, The Edifice Complex, reviews the relationships between dictators, presidents, billionaires, and their architects.

The book’s opening chapters about Hitler, Stalin, Mussolini, and Mao make it clear that the impulse to rebuild cities is anything but democratic. Later discussions of democratically elected leaders such as Francois Mitterand and Tony Blair are not much more generous. And Sudjic’s comments on presidential libraries — especially the one for George H.W. Bush — are, if anything, even more scathing than his assessment of Albert Speer’s Berlin.

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Antiplanner Books #6: The Black Swan

“The Impact of the Highly Improbable” is the subtitle of this strongly antiplanning book by a Lebonese-American investment banker named Nassim Nicholas Taleb. The thesis is that the world is most heavily influenced by large, unpredictable events, so any efforts to plan based on what we know or try to forecast are doomed to failure.

The most salient example offered by Taleb has to do with investing: “In the last fifty years,” he says, “the ten most extreme days in the financial markets represent half the returns.” In other words, half the gains in the Standard & Poors 500 took place in just ten days out of fifty years (roughly 12,000 days of trading). Thus, anyone who says they have a sure-fire method of earning profits through investing (as several Nobel prize winners have claimed) is simply deluding themselves or their clients.

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Summer Book Reviews #5: The Peter Hall Trilogy

Once upon a time there was an urban planner who traveled around the world and looked at urban plans and discovered they were disasters. For this, he received a knighthood from the Queen.

Sir Peter Hall is a planning professor at University College in London, and he also taught and did research for a time at UC Berkeley. Though he believes in planning, his books provide an excellent case for antiplanners. In fact, whenever I get frustrated with some planner talking or writing about the wonders of planning, all I need to do is read a portion of one of these books to get a breath of fresh air from an objective observer of the profession.

Click on the image of each book to get information about purchasing a copy.

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Summer Book Reviews #4: The Road More Traveled

We are back to transportation with this book, which came out just after the 2006 Preserving the American Dream conference, so I think of it as a new book. The Road More Traveled is written by two “fellows” with the Reason Foundation and is the star (so far) of that group’s mobility project.

In contrast to Street Smart, which idealistically promotes widescale privatization, this book takes a more incrementalist look at highways and transportation. Bob Poole, who leads the Reason Foundation’s mobility project, ultimately supports privatization and tolling, but is willing to accept (and has even invented) many “halfway” measures, including high-occupancy toll (HOT) lanes (which some true-blue libertarians might question because it leave most lanes untolled).

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Summer Book Reviews #3: Don’t Call It Sprawl

Rather than the polemics of an activist like Wendell Cox, today’s book is an academic look at the sprawl debate: author William T. (for Thomas) Bogart is dean of academic affairs at York College in Pennsylvania. His book, Don’t Call It Sprawl: Metropolitan Structure in the Twenty-First Century, attempts to analyze cities using data and the latest research.

Though similar in some ways, Robert Bruegmann’s Sprawl: A Compact History was an architect’s view of the sprawl debate. This book is an economist’s view — and (unlike the Antiplanner) not an economist with a particularly libertarian bent.

Bogart shows that urban areas — which he likes to call “trading places” because he sees trade as the main reason people choose to live closely together — are far more complicated that planners understand. Until recently, many planners had a monocentric view of cities; that is, they implicitly assumed that everything revolved around downtown. But that kind of city disappeared in the early twentieth century.

In the last couple of decades or so, planners have discovered the polycentric city, that is that modern urban areas have many job, commercial, and retail centers. For some reason, planners think they have to designate various regional and town centers and then stimulate their growth, as if they weren’t going to grow anyway. Planners then want to connect all those centers with a rail transit system.
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But Bogart shows that even the polycentric view of a city is obsolete. Together, the old downtowns and the edge cities/regional and town centers only have about 30 to 40 percent of the jobs in modern U.S. urban areas. That means that planners are ignoring well over half the workers in the region.

For example, advocates of Denver’s FasTracks rail boondoggle bragged that it would put 29 percent of the jobs in the Denver metropolitan area within a half mile of a rail station. But 29 percent is a pathetic number. Since well under half the commuters to downtown ride transit, and even a rail system would not serve other centers as well as downtown, FasTracks will almost certainly never serve even 10 percent of the region’s employees.

I don’t agree with everything Bogart says. For example, he doesn’t see anything wrong with subsidizing 30 to 40 percent of the cost of downtown housing “if that is desired by the city.” Such subsidies may be strongly desired by downtown property owners and developers, but few others in the city are going to benefit.

Nevertheless, I recommend the book to anyone who wants a better understanding of how modern cities really work. We’ve also invited Bogart to speak at the Preserving the American Dream conference in San Jose this November.

Summer Book Reviews #2: War on the Dream

If anyone deserves the title of antiplanner, it is Wendell Cox. Wendell has challenged rail transit plans in Atlanta, Denver, Charlotte, and many other cities. For this reason, he has been called an anti-transit zealot, which is a typical tactic of the rail nuts to assert that anyone who doesn’t favor their particular flavor of transit must oppose all transit.

In fact, Wendell helped plan the Los Angeles rail network, and became a rail skeptic only after those rail lines went way over budget and, when finally built, ended up carrying far fewer riders than predicted. Now he insists that transportation funds be spent cost effectively, which greatly annoys people who think nothing of spending a $200 million a mile on a rail line that will carry fewer people than a $5 million lane-mile of freeway.

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Summer Book Reviews #1: Street Smart

Summer is finally here, and so naturally you want to know, “What antiplanning books should I read on my summer vacation?” This week, the Antiplanner will make a few suggestions.

Today, we look at Street Smart: Competition, Entrepreneurship, and the Future of Roads. Now that highway tolls are becoming acceptable, the book takes the next step and argues for road privatization.

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