Get Free Shipping on orders over $79
Cities and Complexity : Understanding Cities with Cellular Automata, Agent-Based Models, and Fractals - Michael Batty

Cities and Complexity

Understanding Cities with Cellular Automata, Agent-Based Models, and Fractals

By: Michael Batty

Paperback | 24 August 2007

At a Glance

Paperback


RRP $150.00

$113.99

24%OFF

or 4 interest-free payments of $28.50 with

 or 

Ships in 25 to 30 business days

Mario Carpo provides a subtle and insightful discussion of the intellectual structures that guide architectural composition and the ways that these structures were transformed by the historic shifts from script to print and from hand-made drawings to mechanically reproduced images. He goes on to suggest that the current shift from print to digital representations will have similarly profound consequences. This is a crucial text for anyone interested in the interrelationships of media and design processes.

As urban planning moves from a centralized, top-down approach to a decentralized, bottom-up perspective, our conception of urban systems is changing. In Cities and Complexity, Michael Batty offers a comprehensive view of urban dynamics in the context of complexity theory, presenting models that demonstrate how complexity theory can embrace a myriad of processes and elements that combine into organic wholes. He argues that bottom-up processes--in which the outcomes are always uncertain--can combine with new forms of geometry associated with fractal patterns and chaotic dynamics to provide theories that are applicable to highly complex systems such as cities.

Batty begins with models based on cellular automata (CA), simulating urban dynamics through the local actions of automata. He then introduces agent-based models (ABM), in which agents are mobile and move between locations. These models relate to many scales, from the scale of the street to patterns and structure at the scale of the urban region. Finally, Batty develops applications of all these models to specific urban situations, discussing concepts of criticality, threshold, surprise, novelty, and phase transition in the context of spatial developments. Every theory and model presented in the book is developed through examples that range from the simplified and hypothetical to the actual. Deploying extensive visual, mathematical, and textual material, Cities and Complexity will be read both by urban researchers and by complexity theorists with an interest in new kinds of computational models.

Sample chapters and examples from the book, and other related material, can be found at http: //www.complexcity.info

Industry Reviews
"Mario Carpo provides a subtle and insightful discussion of the intellectual structures that guide architectural composition and the ways that these structures were transformed by the historic shifts from script to print and from hand-made drawings to mechanically reproduced images. He goes on to suggest that the current shift from print to digital representations will have similarly profound consequences. This is a crucial text for anyone interested in the interrelationships of media and design processes."--William J. Mitchell, Professor of Architecture and Media Arts and Sciences, MIT "Batty is a master at presenting challenging material in 'gentle though rigorous' ways, judiciously combining text, graphics, and notation, and moving from easy-to-grasp toy problems to real examples."--Helen Couclelis, Department of Geography, University of California, Santa Barbara "*Cities and Complexity* unites into an integrated whole pathbreaking urban research centered on methods of nonlinear dynamic emergence and self-organization. This book will be an ideal text for advanced students of urban systems and an invaluable guide for their instructors, as well as for practitioners who seek to simulate alternative futures."--Brian J.L. Berry, Lloyd Viel Berkner Regental Professor and Dean of the School of Social Science, University of Texas at Dallas "Batty is a master at presenting challenging material in 'gentle though rigorous' ways, judiciously combining text, graphics, and notation, and moving from easy-to-grasp toy problems to real examples." Helen Couclelis , Professor, Department of Geography, University of California, Santa Barbara

More in Urban & Municipal Planning

Full Circle : A Search for the World That Comes Next - Scott Ludlam
Humanise : A Maker's Guide to Building Our World - Thomas Heatherwick

RRP $29.99

$24.99

17%
OFF
Community Development for Social Change - Dave Beck
The Public Policy Process : 8th Edition - Michael Hill
Bluefield Housing as Alternative Infill for the Suburbs - Damian Madigan
Against Landlords : How to Solve the Housing Crisis - Nick Bano
Surveillance : Key Ideas in Criminology - Benjamin Goold
Collaborations in Architecture and Sociology - Anita Bakshi

RRP $305.00

$263.75

14%
OFF
Collaborations in Architecture and Sociology - Anita Bakshi