Hyperplan- Crater city, Mitzpe Ramon & the Living City
Hyperplan- Crater city, Mitzpe Ramon & the Living City (81 pages)
This book is for architects, urban planners, designers, educators, students, cultural strategists, developers, and civic leaders who sense that the old language of city planning is no longer enough.
It is for anyone who looks at empty lots, isolated neighborhoods, underused rooftops, harsh climates, seasonal tourism, declining public life, or fragmented towns and sees something waiting beneath the surface. It is especially for those who believe that the future of urbanism will belong to places that can adapt, respond, expand, contract, and reinvent themselves without losing their identity.
Through the extraordinary case of Mitzpe Ramon, a desert town living on the edge of one of the world’s most dramatic craters, the book introduces Hyper Urbanism as a new way of thinking about cities. The town becomes a living organism.
The crater becomes a spatial teacher. The road becomes an artery. The roof becomes a second ground. The empty lot becomes a public room. The temporary structure becomes a serious civic tool. Instead of treating planning as a fixed masterplan, the book invites you into a dynamic Hyperplan, a flexible system of movement, time, culture, landscape, and reversible architecture.
Readers will walk away with a radically expanded understanding of what urban design can be. They will learn how to read a place through its hidden potentials, how to activate dormant spaces through temporary and permanent interventions, how to design public life around climate and time, and how to transform landscape forces into civic identity. They will understand how a settlement can breathe: expanding toward the desert, concentrating inward around community, rising onto rooftops, gathering at the edge, and shifting its programs according to season, need, and desire.
For architects and designers, this book offers a new design vocabulary: vectors, intervals, desert rooms, reversible structures, moving oases, shaded arteries, crater-edge rituals, and multi-level public life. For urban planners, it offers a powerful alternative to rigid masterplanning. For students, it opens a new way to think about site, climate, program, and time. For civic leaders and cultural developers, it shows how culture, society, and economy can become one living system.
This is a book about Mitzpe Ramon, but its ideas reach far beyond the crater. It speaks to every town, campus, district, resort, desert settlement, coastal edge, post-industrial zone, and developing city searching for a more flexible future. It offers a vision of urbanism that is lighter, smarter, more responsive, and deeply human.
By the end of the book, you will see cities differently. You will understand that a place does not need to become larger to become more alive. It needs to discover its rhythms, activate its rooms, connect its fragments, and learn how to move with time. Hyper Urbanism gives you the language, the imagination, and the practical framework to begin designing cities that breathe.

