![]() ![]() Only then will incrementalist, reformist, smart strategies dominating the sustainability debate be surpassed by the achievement of true sustainability locally that radiates outward regionally, nationally and globally. That is, we can only accomplish this goal by greening the cities of the north and providing exemplary strategies, tools and programs for the developing nations of the south to pursue an alternative and ecologically resilient path to strong urban sustainability. Only this approach offers genuine hope of closing the gap and overcoming the frictions between the nations of the north and those of the south. He knows not where either road might lead. ![]() Such cities can, and must be, guided by their technological tools, architectural blueprints and sociocultural practices defining strong and robust sustainability. Summary of poet’s existentialistic philosophy Blascoe 3 Life. Robert Frosts poem The Road Not Taken describes a traveler faced with a choice of which one of two roads to travel. Despite the welter of “sustainable cities” populating the built environment of the twenty-first century, we argue that only the road less traveled – i.e., the strong sustainability strategy outlined in this book and used as a critical evaluative framework for analyzing representative cases around the world – holds out hope of creating new sustainable city-regions across the globe. One road seems to be as if it has been traveled many times, causing the road to be easier to travel by. Robert Frost, “The Road Not Taken”Īgainst the background of the imposing dangers to international stability, global ecological equilibrium and human survival, we close this book with a summary of the road most traveled to date in the projects and programs to build sustainable cities and city-regions. The main theme in The Road Not Takenby Robert Frost is about making choices.The poem starts off when the speaker finds himself walking by the woods and comes across a cross road.The speaker then has to decide which way to continue by. ![]()
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