In Praise of Urban Disorder
In Praise of Urban Disorder
The book Messy Cities looks at unregulated and informal development from Toronto to Tokyo to show how less planning can deliver more vibrant neighborhoods.
By Rebecca Greenwald
February 3, 2026 at 12:08 PM EST
(
Bloomberg CItyLab) In his essay Planning for an Unplanned City, Jason Thorne, Torontos chief planner, poses a pair of provocative questions to his colleagues. Have our rules and regulations squeezed too much of the life out of our cities? he asks. But also how do you plan and design a city that is safe and functional while also leaving room for spontaneity and serendipity?
This premise that urban plannings efforts to impose order risk editing out the culture, character, complexity and creative friction that makes cities cities is a guiding theme in
Messy Cities: Why We Cant Plan Everything, a collection of essays, including Thornes, gathered by Toronto-based editors Zahra Ebrahim, Leslie Woo, Dylan Reid and John Lorinc. In it, they argue that messiness is an essential element of the city. Case studies from around the world show how imperfection can be embraced, created and preserved, from the informal street eateries of East Los Angeles to the sports facilities carved out of derelict spaces in Mumbai.
Embracing urban disorder might seem like an unlikely cause. But Woo, an urban planner and chief executive officer of the Toronto-based nonprofit CivicAction, and Reid, executive editor of Spacing magazine, offer up a series of questions that get at the heart of debates surrounding messy urbanism. In an essay about street art, they ask, Is it ugly or creative? Does it bring disruption or diversity? Should it be left to emerge from below or be managed from above? Is it permanent or ephemeral? Does it benefit communities or just individuals? Does it create opportunity or discomfort? Are there limits around it and if so can they be effective?
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The phrase messy cities could be construed negatively but it seems like a real term of affection for the editors and authors of this book. What does it represent to you?
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ZE: Messiness has become a wedge issue a way to pronounce and lean into existing political cleavages. Across the world we see politicians pointing to the challenges cities face housing affordability, transit accessibility, access to employment and wrongfully blame or attribute these urban messes to specific populations and groups. We see this in the rising anti-immigrant rhetoric we hear all over the world. As an editing team, I think there was a shared understanding that multicultural and diverse societies are more successful and that when we have to navigate shared social and cultural space, its better for society. .........................(more)
https://www.bloomberg.com/news/features/2026-02-03/in-messy-cities-a-call-for-some-healthy-urban-disorder?srnd=phx-citylab