William Farquhar Payson, 1932. — 90 p.
The disappearing cityOn earth
Primitive instincts
The uneconomic basis of the city
The victim of the battle of increments
The experiment
The case for the individual
The broadacre city
Find the citizenChange
The forces that are tearing the city down
The new standard of space measurement
The nature of modern resources
What the traffic problem really means to the man in the street
The new idea of luxury
Futile pattern . The present city
What thought as modern —is bringing relief?
Modern architecture
The architect
The true atonement
General view of the broadacre city of the future based upon the new scale of spacing
Architecture and acreage seen as landscape
The super highway - and the tributary hard road the lakes and streams
The great traffic station
The feeder for the old cityPower units
The organic architecture of the various new buildings
The new scale
Simplicity
The negation that is affirmation
What , then ,in general detail will broadacre buildings be like?
The tenement
The employee on his acre
The tiller of the soil and the husband of the animals
Beyond the vortexFactory decentralization and integration
The office in the new city
The new store : or distribution of manufactured merchandise
The maintenance of the motor car and the plane
For those who have been emasculated by the present city
The bachelor
The humane hospital
The university : universal
The communal centre
The theatre
The new church
The design centre
The new school: the teacher and his flock
The new home in the broadacre city
Three words
His modern home
Let it work
New and an organic simplicity
Typical examples
In conclusion
It is time
Evolution