Garden
As presented in “Public Parks and the Enlargement of Towns,” towns are constantly growing diminishing the interaction amongst its citizens. Towns have become excessively polluted in air, water, circulation, and territory. The repartition of land as denoted by the town is centralized on governmental profit and welfare as well as indirectly distributed. The solution to this distinct town characteristics resembles a homogeneous behavior of the “country”. A more open land, with disinfected air, and pure water. Pure characteristics that describe the country are essential for the grown of human behavior and interaction.
This characteristics should be implemented in a single entity, and be introduced to the urban society of the town. The solution ends up being the incorporation of the “garden” in the midst of a tumultuous and broken town system. Only the garden could create a balance of characters amongst the society. The garden would promote the practice of exertive and receptive recreation. Both factors that contribute to the wellbeing of the society. In “The Town-Country Magnet,” the garden plays a mayor role within the society to extend where it becomes the most indistinct attracting force amongst the Town Country citizens.
This garden, possesses the qualities described as the, “embodiment of Divine love for man,” a true innate quality that can potentially redefine and restructure any society. In this case the incentive to propose the “Town-Country” typology as a solution to the current society disadvantages working as a perfect mediator amongst both.