Title: Planning history in the USA
1Planning history in the USA
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3 THE STATE
Enviro-nment
Private sector/ Market forces
Community interest groups
4US IMMIGRATION by fiscal year, 1820-1900. U.S.
Immigration and Naturalization Service, 1990
Statistical Yearbook. Washington, D.C. U.S.
Government Printing Office, 1991
5Urban Reform in the 19th Century
- Characteristics of the 19C city in
- - Early stages of capitalist development
- Development concentrated in small gateway
cities - (Atlantic seaboard and along rivers and the
Great Lakes - region)
- Private sector control
- Raison detre economic growth
- Weak government/limited intervention in market
place - No planning for orderly development
- Great waves of immigration
- Overcrowded cities
- Housing shortage
- Unsanitary conditions
- Public health hazards
- Disease epidemics (e. g. yellow fever, malaria,
cholera)
619 Century Planning Activities1. Sanitary
Reform
- Technological innovations
- European influences, and
- Incipient planning actions to improve cleanliness
of city and public health conditions - introduction of water carriage sewerage systems
(sewers) - Inventory of sanitary conditions
- Provision of public open space
- Importance of adequate ventilation and sunlight
and urban vegetation
7This set of photos, taken on Fifth Street in New
York City before and after Warings campaign,
illustrates the dramatic effects of environmental
sanitation at the end of the nineteenth century.
(Museum of the City of New York)
8II. CITY BEAUTIFUL Movement
- - Involved actions intended to improve the
appearance of the city as well as improvement in
public design. - CB movement included 4 main elements or themes
- Municipal art
- Civic improvement
- Outdoor art
- Classical design
9Municipal Art
- promotion of decoration in the city
- addition of sculpture, statues
- public art display arches, murals, fountains
- tree planting
- use of color in public spaces
- anti billboards and anti smoke campaigns
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11Civic Improvement
- Sought to temper the effect of industrialization
in the domestic (home and neighborhood)
environment - Often led by women who promoted
- Cleanup and beautification of communities
- improvement in appearance of front yards
- Promotion of decorative home gardens
- By 1905 there were 2,426 affiliated civic
improvement societies supporting the American
Planning Movement.
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14Outdoor Art
- - Led by American Park and Outdoor Art
Association (APOAA) - - Frederick Law Olmsted a major figure of APOAA
and - American Civic Association joined APOAA.
Together they pushed for - a National Park System
- city parks for enjoyment working people
- planned urban development
- better housing, civic art, sanitation and traffic
safety.
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16Classical design
- - Led by Architects
- Objective to integrate European classicism and
grand design in American city, including - traditional Grecian-Roman design themes, into
city plans. - See for Example Daniel Burnhams Plan of
Chicago - But preceded by other examples like Pierre
LEnfants street plan of Washington , D.C. in
1790
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18European Architectural Influences
- Doric style Corinthian style
19III. Neighborhood building and housing reform
- Individuals and settlement workers introduced
humanitarian concerns for women and children - Sound housing
- Home improvement
- Schools
- Playground
- Spirit of community life
- Overcoming crowding and unsanitary conditions
inside residences
20NYC Upper Middle Class Parlor NYC
Tenement Room
21The Settlement House Movement
- European examples
- Englands first - Toynbee Hall 1884
- American imitation
- New Yorks Stanton Hall 1886
- Chicagos Hull House and many others
-
2219 Century The culminating experience
23The 1893 Columbian Exposition
- In this White city of almost 700 acres
Chicagoans and millions of visitors, accustomed
to urban ugliness, saw for the first time a
splendid example of civic design and beauty in
the classic pattern and on a grand scale, and
they liked it. Indeed it marked the beginning in
this country of orderly arrangement of extensive
buildings and grounds. - Robert Wrigley, Jr. In Kreukeberg, p.58
24Creating a vision of the cityAnd they came to
experience the White City
25IV. Comprehensive Planning The Plan of Chicago
(1901-1905)
26Then and now Dynamic aspects of spatial images.
Where in the world are these structures located?
27Discussion?
- 19th Century urban planning actions.