This book was the first detailed and systematic account of the property
and construction sectors of the British economy. Developing out of a
materialist theoretical perspective, Dr Smyth provides an alternative
explanation of the different characteristics of the two sectors and
rejects traditional notions of the 'backwardness' of the construction
sector. The specific historical experience of the Second World War and
the rebuilding it necessitated, provides the basis of this analysis and
it is argued that the particular divergencies of the construction sector
stem from periods of wider economic crisis. Similar periods of crisis
have shaped the property sector which, dependent upon the complex
relationship between ground rent, the value of the building and building
rent, cannot be understood in terms of 'urban rent'. Property companies
and the construction industry in Britain challenges both established and
radical thinking and its historical account of the development,
management and production of the built environment in the years since
1939 addresses some of the central concerns of human geography today.