HISTORY - Key Planning Figures - FPK Flashcards

1
Q

Charles Abrams

A
  • created the New York Housing Authority.
  • 1965 he published The City is the Frontier, a book that was highly critical of U.S. federal policies surrounding slum clearance, urban renewal, and public housing.
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2
Q

Thomas Adams

A
  • An important planner during the Garden City movement.
  • He was the secretary of the Garden City Association
  • became the first manager of Letchworth, U.K.
  • He developed a number of garden suburbs in Englaand
  • went on to teach planning at MIT and Harvard
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3
Q

Saul Alinsky

A
  • An advocate of community organizing.
  • Alinsky organized Chicago’s poor in the late 1930s and 1940s.
  • In 1946, he published Reveille for Radicals, which encouraged those who were poor to become involved in American democracy.
  • Later he published Rules for Radicals, which provided 13 rules for community organizing.
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4
Q

Sherry Arnstein

A

“A Ladder of Citizen Participation” for the Journal of the American Planning Association in 1969. This article describes the levels of involvement by citizens depending on the form of participation utilized.

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5
Q

Daniel Burnham

A
  • Chicago architect
  • prominent proponent of the City Beautiful movement.
  • He was the lead force behind the 1893 Columbian Exposition
  • 1909 Plan of Chicago.
  • His most famous quote is “Make no little plans. They have no fire to stir men’s blood.”
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6
Q

Rachel Carson

A

wrote Silent Spring, an important book in environmental planning

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7
Q

Robert Moses

A

Transformed New York City’s public works from the 1930s through the 1950s. He expanded the state’s park system and built numerous parkways. He also built parks, playgrounds, highways, bridges, tunnels, and public housing.

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8
Q

John Nolen

A

designed Mariemont, Ohio and was a leading planner and landscape architect. He made substantial contributions including creating the first comprehensive plan in Florida, contributing to the park system in Madison, Wisconsin and designing Venice, Florida.

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9
Q

Frederick Law Olmsted, Sr.

A

Considered the father of landscape architecture. He is responsible for many of the nation’s most important parks including Central and Prospect Parks in New York City, Niagra Reservation, and university campus landscapes. He was part of the design team for Riverside, IL, laid out in 1868.

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10
Q

Clarence Perry

A

Developed the neighborhood unit concept which was implemented in Radburn, New Jersey. He was a key contributor to the 1929 Regional Survey of New York and its Environs.

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11
Q

Paolo Soleri

A

Architect responsible for designing Arcosanti, an experimental utopian city in Arizona focused on minimizing the impact of development on the natural environment.

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12
Q

Clarence Stein

A

Designed Sunnyside Gardens in Queens, NY, Radburn, NJ, and many other garden suburbs in the U.S. He was a major proponent of the garden city movement. He wrote New Town for America in 1951

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13
Q

Rexford Tugwell

A

Served as the head of the Resettlement Administration during the New Deal. He worked on the greenbelt cities program, which sought construction of new, self-sufficient cities. Tugwell was closely involved in the development of Arthurdale, West Virginia, a Resettlement Administration community. He later served on the New York City Planning Commission and served as governor of Puerto Rico.

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14
Q

Sir Raymond Unwin

A

English town planner and designer of Letchworth. He later lectured at the University of Birmingham in England and Columbia University. He wrote Town Planning in Practice, published in 1909.

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15
Q

Catherine Bauer Wurster

A

Founder of American housing policy. She worked to reform policy that was related to housing and city planning. She served as executive secretary of the Regional Planning Association of America. She wrote Modern Housing and was influential in the passage of the Housing Act of 1937.

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16
Q

Pierre Charles L’Enfant

A

Known for his 1792 plan of Washington, D.C., whose radial streets and grand vistas influenced generations of American planners, Parisian born Pierre Charles L’Enfant was made a major in the Continental Army in 1778 and was later charged with creating a plan for locating public buildings in the new capital city on the Potomac River. Designated a National Planning Pioneer in 1992.

17
Q

Ian Lennox McHarg

A

Ian Lennox McHarg (1920–2001), a Scottish-born landscape architect, changed the face of the planning profession through his ecological principles and approach to plans and design. In 1954, McHarg joined the faculty of the University of Pennsylvania where he pushed for the creation of the Department of Landscape Architecture and Regional Planning. He is renowned for his advocacy of ecological planning and for the layered mapping techniques that created the foundation for today’s geographic information systems. Designated a National Planning Pioneer in 1997.

18
Q

Robert Moses

A

Robert Moses (1888–1981) left his mark on New York City, Long Island, and Westchester County, New York, during the mid 20th century. Although never elected to public office, he was considered one of the most powerful persons in New York State government from the 1930s to the 1950s. He was chief in the design and construction of more than 400 miles of parkways, the Triborough Bridge, and Jones Beach, the world’s largest public bathing beach. Designated a National Planning Pioneer in 1994.

19
Q

Lewis Mumford

A

1895-1990. Historian, philosopher, architectural and literary critic. The City in History. 1961. Wrote for the New Yorker for many years, critical of sprawl and social problems. Felt that medieval city plans were ideal and that modern cities are too much like Roman garrison towns. Saw the city as a theater for social action with all other functions serving this primary one. Influenced by Patrick Geddes, and influence on Jane Jacobs.

20
Q

Frederick Law Olmsted, Jr.

A

Frederick Law Olmsted, Jr. (1870–1957) is best known for continuing the work of his father, Frederick Olmsted, Sr., and his lifetime commitment to wildlife conservation and national parks, including projects at the Everglades and Yosemite National Park. He also designed Forest Hill Gardens in Queens, New York, and Palos Verdes Estates in Los Angeles County, California. He served as the first president of the American City Planning Institute. Designated a National Planning Pioneer in 1990.

21
Q

Edward Bassett

A

Father of Zoning. Chairman of NYC Heights of buildings commission. Promoted zoning and big influence in getting NYC 1916 zoning code passed.