The book would be more accurately called "Smooth neighborhood," on the scourge of master-planned, homogeneous theme parks-within-a-city. The author might have eventually gone on to indict whole cities, but started by dragging a single area in Amsterdam and the Kings Cross redevelopment project in London. I've not been to Amsterdam, but the vision of a place with magically no vacant doorways and not a bit of diversity is not what I saw at Kings Cross, and that was before Covid, when it wasn't an epic struggle to keep shops open.
To my mind overstated and oversold; I bailed out early, so DNF and no review. It could get more compelling. I'm notorious for throwing back too early.