According to myth, the urban sprawl of Los Angeles and New York City will one day meet in a Nebraska cornfield. In Sprawl, Robert Bruegmann tells us not to worry about such an eventuality. He defines sprawl as "low density, scattered, urban development without systematic large-scale or regional public land-use planning." The book is a lively discussion about why our current preoccupation with sprawl is unnecessary and why policies to address it are misguided.
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