Book review: Triumph of the City: Đề thi thật IELTS READING (IELTS Reading Recent Actual Test)

· Đề thi thật IELTS Reading

I. Kiến thức liên quan

II. Book review: Triumph of the City: Đề thi thật IELTS READING (IELTS Reading Recent Actual Test)

You should spend about 20 minutes on Questions 1-13, which are based on Reading Passage 1 on pages 2 and 3.

Book review: Triumph of the City
Triumph of the City, by Edward Glaeser, is a thrilling and very readable hymn of praise to an invention so vast and so effective that it is generally taken for granted. More than half the global population already live in urban areas and within twenty years, five million more will flood into the cities of the developed and developing worlds. The crowds and pollution and noise that choke modern cities may horrify us. They shouldn’t, says Glaeser: they are signs of growth, energy, and aspiration. Cities are our best and brightest hope.

This idea has had more than two hundred years of resistance. Not long after the Industrial Revolution began in Britain, the Romantic poets turned away from the smoke and factories of their cities to celebrate the air and light of untouched nature. In 19th-century America, the writer Henry David Thoreau retreated to the wilderness of Walden Pond to live the solitary, simple life, and succeeding generations of Americans had cities were bad and nature was good.

They had, Glaeser admits, a point. The early industrial cities were dirty, since they lacked efficient waste disposal systems, and diseases spread rapidly among the population. But more importantly they were profitable, and there were enormous commercial incentives to make them work, as well as political ones. Their transformation could be achieved at a stroke: in the second half of the 19th century, the French emperor Napoleon III gave Baron Haussmann unrestricted power to turn the slum-infested city of Paris into one of the wonders and delights of the modern world. Or the transformation could be done by trial and error. Glaeser has a brilliant account of the stop-start progression of New York. Its role as the 20th-century pole in this cultural and economic universe of the world. Either way, Paris, New York and other cities developed because they were the most effective markets for ideas and innovation.

For these and many other reasons, we should not be so upset by the spectacle of urban poverty. The poor flock to cities in the hope of becoming richer (which, by and large, they did). They also invigorate the economy of the city. This does not excuse them but they allow property prices to soar with unreasonable planning regulations. Instead, cities should build more houses and thereby hold property prices in check.

It can go wrong, of course. In Glaeser’s view, this is primarily because municipal authorities fail to understand the principal virtues of cities. The heart of Paris, as many Parisians say, is turning into a museum because of attempts to preserve Baron Haussmann’s 19th-century boulevards. Glaeser defends their preservation but argues that in the 1950s the French made a mistake in developing a huge high-rise, commercial area of La Défense on the outskirts of the city. He believes they should have revitalized the central area of Montparnasse into a new commercial district. This would have revived much of the city centre without destroying its fabric. In India, Mumbai could easily benefit from new areas of infill and the height restrictions could be relaxed by raising the limits presently imposed on the height of new constructions.>> Form đăng kí giải đề thi thật IELTS 4 kĩ năng kèm bài giải bộ đề 100 đề PART 2 IELTS SPEAKING quý đang thi (update hàng tuần) từ IELTS TUTOR

In America, it is the suburbs that have proved to be the real disaster. Glaeser is repentant on this subject himself. He moved to the suburbs when he had children. His entirely legitimate excuse is that the government made him (and millions like him) do it. By under-taxing petrol and imposing tight planning restrictions on inner cities, while forcing up the cost of property, it made flight to the suburbs more or less inevitable for the middle classes.

This is a disaster because nothing is more inefficient than a suburb. Suburbanites mingle less, and lose the face-to-face contact that makes being in cities so much more economically powerful. Houses are costlier to heat and cool than flats, and suburbanites drive thousands more miles per year than city dwellers. Every aspect of life involves more consumption. This leads to the strongest and newest argument in favour of cities—they are good for the environment. To live in the country or the suburbs is to have a vastly larger carbon footprint than an urban dweller.

Full of characters and accessible information, this is a tremendous book, not least because, like me, you will find yourself constantly seeking reasons to disagree. Like the poor in the city, this is a sign of success. If you hate the city and get moist-eyed at the thought of the country, then you are another, Glaeser is the man you will have to take on.

Questions 1–8
Complete the notes below.
Choose ONE WORD ONLY from the passage for each answer.
Write your answers in boxes 1–8 on your answer sheet.

Cities
Problems with early cities
• dirt
• 1 __________
but there were commercial and 2 __________ reasons for improving them

Urban poverty is not a major problem because poor people
• generally get 3 __________
• help to develop the 4 __________

Cities do have some problems—e.g.
• the centre of Paris is becoming a 5 __________
• Mumbai is negatively affected by height restrictions of new buildings

In the U.S., the middle classes have moved to the suburbs due to
• cheap petrol
• high 6 __________ prices in inner cities

Disadvantages of suburbs
• less personal 7 __________
• increased 8 __________ of resources such as heating—which damages the environment>> IELTS TUTOR hướng dẫn PHÂN TÍCH ĐỀ THI 30/5/2020 IELTS WRITING TASK 2 (kèm bài sửa HS đạt 6.5)

Questions 9–13
Do the following statements agree with the information given in Reading Passage 1?
In boxes 9–13 on your answer sheet, write:

TRUE—if the statement agrees with the information
FALSE—if the statement contradicts the information
NOT GIVEN—if there is no information on this

  1. Glaeser believes that congestion and poverty in some modern cities indicate serious problems.
  2. The writer Henry David Thoreau discussed the ideas of the Romantic poets in his work.
  3. Emperor Napoleon III was influenced by the complaints of poor people living in Paris.
  4. Strict planning regulations may be beneficial for a city’s development.
  5. Glaeser argues that the location of commercial development at La Défense was a bad idea.

III. Đáp án Book review: Triumph of the City: Đề thi thật IELTS READING (IELTS Reading Recent Actual Test)

III. Đáp án Book review: Triumph of the City: Đề thi thật IELTS READING (IELTS Reading Recent Actual Test)
III. Đáp án Book review: Triumph of the City: Đề thi thật IELTS READING (IELTS Reading Recent Actual Test)
Các khóa học IELTS online 1 kèm 1 - 100% cam kết đạt target 6.0 - 7.0 - 8.0 - Đảm bảo đầu ra - Thi không đạt, học lại FREE

Các khóa học IELTS online 1 kèm 1 - 100% cam kết đạt target 6.0 - 7.0 - 8.0 - Đảm bảo đầu ra - Thi không đạt, học lại FREE

>> IELTS Intensive Writing

>> IELTS Intensive Speaking

>> IELTS Intensive Listening

>> IELTS Intensive Reading

>> IELTS Cấp tốc

>> IELTS General

>> Thành tích học sinh IELTS TUTOR với hàng ngàn feedback được cập nhật hàng ngày

Các khóa học IELTS online 1 kèm 1 - 100% cam kết đạt target 6.0 - 7.0 - 8.0 - Đảm bảo đầu ra - Thi không đạt, học lại FREE
Khóa học IELTS Reading
Lý do chọn IELTS TUTOR