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Published byBrycen Graham Modified over 9 years ago
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Responses to the Industrial City (cont.) Planning, Social Theory & Policy
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City Beautiful Movement Goals “beauty, order, system & harmony” Middle & upper middle-class effort to refashion the city into beautiful, functional entities
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Garden City Movement Eb. Howard’s: Garden Cities Concepts "To-morrow: A peaceful path to Real Reform” (1898)
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Impact in Britain Letchworth: 1903 Welywyn: 1920
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British New Towns Post World War II Britain Planning Act (1948): rebuilt & avoid excesses of American suburban growth Development Corps w/ direct Treasury finance By 1971 – 28 towns (1,415,000 people) - 182,000 new houses; - over 35 mil. Sq. ft. of new factory space
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American Influence Design Implications – Radburn Plan Greenbelt Cities New Towns (?) – Reston, New York & Columbia, Maryland
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Greendale WI 1938
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LeCorbusier
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Modernist Influence Public Housing
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Modernist Influence Town Plans *Brasilia * Chandigarh
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Social Science Chicago School & Human Ecology Park & Burgess – *Social Change (Deviance) *Ethnography *Ecology
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Homer Hoyt’s Model
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Assessing the “American Dream”
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A Nation of Homeowners -? 1920 – 20% 1940 – 44% 1960 – 60% 1980 – 66% 2000 – 67%
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Housing Market Industrial City – introduced generalized housing market Before Twenties Boom – Prior to economic boom, two-thirds of American population judged to be poorly served by private market (“the Housers”)
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1920s – Changing Urban Form Streetcar Suburbs – radial development, lower density & greater dispersion In 1920s, for the first time, suburbs grew faster than the central cities – much faster Automobile’s contribution – “The city is doomed... We shall solve the city problem by leaving the city.” Henry Ford Policy related to home ownership...
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’20s Streetcar & Automobile Suburbs “take-off”
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Influence on the shape of the city – filling in the radius w/ lower densities Streetcar suburb – Av. Lot size 3,000 sf Auto suburb – Av. Lot size 5,000 sf Pop. Density fell from 20,000 sq. mile to 10,000 sq mile in auto suburb
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Depression Era Impact i. Construction Industry – fell 95% (’28-’33) ii. Mortgage Defaults – by 1933, 50% technically in default
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Responses Home Owners Loan Corporation (1933) Federal Housing Administration (1934) = Keynesian Suburbs
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John Maynard Keynes
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New Lending Practices FHA Insurance – eliminate banking risk Allowed financing of up to 93% of cost (instead of 50-75%) Repayment period extended from standard 10 years to 25-30 years
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Geography of Loans Race: Homer Hoyt’s 1933 analysis 1. English, Scotch, Irish, Scandinavian 2. North Italians 3. Bohemians or Czechs 4. Poles 5. Lithuanians 6. Greeks 7. Russian Jews 8. South Italians 9. Negroes 10. Mexicans
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Geography of Loans City vs. Suburb: 1. Age of property 2. Rental Property vs. Home Owner FHA assessment practices – “redlining”
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