SES # | TOPICS | READINGS |
---|---|---|
Part 1: What is Urban Design and Development? - Translating Values into Design | ||
1 |
Introduction Questions of the day: What is urban design? What is urban development? How are they connected and how do they affect our lives? |
|
2 |
Ways of Seeing the City Questions of the day: What are the visible signs of change in cities? How can we measure the form of cities? How do the underlying values of the observer influence what is observed? |
![]()
|
Part 2: The American City - The Forces That Shape Our Cities | ||
3 |
The Forces That Made Boston Questions of the day: What does the history of Boston's development tell us about the issues facing the city today? Are these forces common to all cities? |
Krieger, Alex. "Past Futures: Boston - Visionary Plans and Practical Visions." Places 5, no. 3 (1989): 56-71.
|
4 |
Walking Tour of Boston Meet at the Government Center T-Stop (outside in front of the City Hall) at 8:00 am. For those students who can't join the tour until 10:30 - we will be in the Skywalk of the Prudential Center Tower (800 Boylston Street between Exeter and Gloucester Streets) at approximately 10:30 am. We will end the tour at noon at South Station Quincy Market where you can have lunch and/or catch a train back to MIT. |
Campbell, Robert. "After the Big Dig, the Big Question: Where's the Vision?" Boston Globe, May 26, 2002. ———. "Beyond the Big Dig National Panel Recommendations." Boston Globe, May 30, 2002. Review Boston.com's "Beyond the Big Dig" prior to the walking tour. |
5 |
The Design of American Cities Questions of the day: What can you tell about a city's origins from its founders? What is the difference between agrarian settlements and industrial cities? What happened to cities as America industrialized? |
|
6 |
The Industrial City and Its Critics Questions of the day: What were nineteenth century and early twentieth century housing and workplace reformers trying to reform? Do we still have company towns? |
In-class video: Excerpt from The Workplace, on Lowell, Massachusetts and Pullman, Illinois. |
7 |
Development Controls Part I: The Institutionalization of Planning and Zoning Question of the day: Can we design cities without designing buildings? How can zoning and other design controls improve our public space? |
"Citizen's Guide to Zoning for Boston." Boston, MA: Boston Redevelopment Authority, pp. 1-24.
|
8 |
Development Controls Part II: Beyond Zoning: Urban Design Guidelines, Design Review and Development Incentives Questions of the day: What is the relationship between development incentives and quality public space? Can urban design guidelines and design review ensure good urban design? What are the newest development controls used by planners? |
Jaffe, Martin. "Performance Zoning - A Reassessment." Land Use Law and Zoning Digest 45, no. 3 (1993): 3-9. In-class video: Whyte, William H. The Social Life of Small Urban Spaces, selections. VHS. New York, NY: Municipal Society of Art, 1984. |
Part 3: Changing Cities by Designing New Ones | ||
9 |
Three Urban Utopias: - Ebenezer Howard's Garden City - Le Corbusier's Radiant City - Frank Lloyd Wright's Broadacre City Questions of the day: What assumptions does each thinker make about how people should live in cities? What beliefs does each hold about the relationship between city design and social change? What aspects of these "utopias" have actually come to pass? |
|
10 |
New Towns in the United States and Abroad Question of the day: What motivates planners to design new towns? |
![]()
Explore the website for the Las Vegas, Nevada community of Summerlin. |
Part 4: Changing Cities by Extending Them - Designing Suburbs and Regions | ||
11 |
The Suburbs Part I: The Origins and Growth of Suburbs Questions of the day: Why do we have suburbs? How and why do the designs of new suburbs differ from the designs of older ones? |
|
12 |
The Suburbs Part II: Rethinking American Suburbs Questions of the day: How do "urbanism" and "uuburbanism" differ as "ways of life"? What is the appeal of small town life, and can this be designed? |
Southworth, Michael, and Peter M. Owens. "The Evolving Metropolis: Studies of Community, Neighborhood and Street Form at the Urban Edge." Journal of the American Planning Association 59, no. 3 (1993): 271-287.
"Bye Bye Suburban Dream." Newsweek, May 15, 1994. |
13 |
Shaping Private Development/Growth Management Questions of the day: What are the social consequences of sprawl? Can private development be controlled to manage growth on the regional scale? What are the current techniques used to manage growth? Guest speaker: Westwood, MA town officials and Cabot, Cabot & Forbes representative - developers for new TOD in former industrial park along the Westwood commuter rail line. |
Flint, Anthony. "Instant Suburb: the Growth of the Suburban Belt along the Interstate 495 Corridor Is Fast, Intense, and Largely Unplanned. Is It Good for Community? Hopkinton Takes Stock." Boston Globe Magazine , June 16, 2002.
|
14 | Midterm Exam | |
Part 5: Changing Cities by Redesigning Their Centers | ||
15 |
Urban Renewal and Its Critics Questions of the day: When does a "neighborhood" become a "slum"? How does one achieve a balance between "renewal" and "preservation"? |
In-class video: The West End. |
16 |
The Tumult of American Public Housing Question of the day: What does urban design have to do with the problems of American public housing? Guest speaker: Professor Lawrence J. Vale |
Franck, Karen A., and Michael Mostoller. "From Courts to Open Space to Streets: Changes in the Site Design of U.S. Public Housing." Journal of Architectural and Planning Research 12, no. 3 (1995): 186-220.
Vale, Lawrence J. "From the Puritans to the Projects: The Ideological Origins of American Public Housing." Harvard Design Magazine 8 (1999): 52-57. McKee, Bradford. "Public Housing's Last Hope." Architecture 86, no. 8 (1997): 94-105. |
17 |
Cultural Districts, Heritage Areas and Tourism: If You Name It, Will They Come? Question of the day: How can urban designers, developers and planners create new economic value for historic places and the inner city? |
Skim "Executive Summary of the Master Plan for the Worcester Arts District, Community Partners Consultants, Inc., 2002." (PDF - 8.7 MB) |
18 | Discussion of Exercise 2 | |
19 |
Downtown Development and the Privatization of Public Space Question of the day: Is 'Public Space' being 'Privatized'? |
Rybczynski, Witold. "The New Downtowns." The Atlantic Monthly 271, no. 5 (1993): 98-106. Robertson, Kent A. "Downtown Redevelopment Strategies in the United States: An End-of-the-Century Assessment." Journal of the American Planning Association 61, no. 4 (1995): 429-437. |
Part 6: New Ways of Seeing, New Ways of Planning | ||
20 |
Landscape, the Environment and the City Questions of the day: How has concern for the landscape, open space, environment and quality of life shaped cities? Can cities be truly "green"? Guest speaker: Thomas Oles |
|
21 |
Natural Processes Guest speaker: Thomas Oles |
|
22 |
Transportation and Its Impacts Question of the day: How has public transportation policy shaped urban form? |
![]()
In Class Video: Klein, Jim and Martha Olson. Taken for a Ride, selections. VHS. Harriman, NY: New Day Films, 1996. |
23 |
The Rise of Community Activism Questions of the day: How has community participation changed urban design and development? Can urban development be a force for social equity? Guest speaker: Lizbeth Heyer, Associate Director of Community Development, Jamaica Plain Neighborhood Development Corporation. |
|
24 |
The Virtual City Question of the day: How have advances in telecommunications technology changed the way we use and conceive cities? Guest speaker: Dennis Frenchman |
![]() ![]() Read "Urban Renewal, the Wireless Way." |
25 |
The Secure City - The Fortification of Space Question of the day: How are concerns about safety and security shaping public space and redefining communities? |
![]()
Zinganel, Michael. "Crime Does Pay! How Security Technology, Architecture and Town Planning Are Powered by Crime." Archis (March 2002): 44-50. Please skim: National Capital Planning Commission, The National Capital Urban Design and Security Plan. October 2002. ( Read page 4 Key Findings and Recommendations in "Designing for Security in the Nation's Capital." ( |
26 | Discussion of Final Paper | |
27 | Final Exam |