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Planning history I: A story of Utopia A map of the world that does not include Utopia is not even worth glancing at, for it leaves out the one country.

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Presentation on theme: "Planning history I: A story of Utopia A map of the world that does not include Utopia is not even worth glancing at, for it leaves out the one country."— Presentation transcript:

1 Planning history I: A story of Utopia A map of the world that does not include Utopia is not even worth glancing at, for it leaves out the one country at which Humanity is always landing. And when Humanity lands there, it looks out, and seeing a better country, sets sail. Progress is the idealisation of Utopias (Oscar Wilde, 1891, The Soul of Man Under Socialism, 34)

2 Readings Hamnett, S. and Freestone, R. (2000) The Australian Metropolis: A Planning History, Allen and Unwin, Sydney, Chapters 1-5. Waitt, G., McGuirk, P., Dunn, K., Hartig, K. and Burnley, I. (2000) Introducing Human Geography: Globalisation, Difference and Inequality, Pearson, Sydney, pp. 269-332. See also Howard in The City Reader

3 Planning as design for power The avenue, temple, garden and palace Privatisation - from 99-999 year leases to freehold Subdivision - sale of individual lots and blocks without regard for uses, conditions or needs Egypt 2nd millennium BC Ninevah 6th c. BC

4 Geometry Levinus Hulsius, Theory and Practice of the Geometric Quadrant, 1594

5 Geometry and Glasgow geography: It is a well known axiom of Euclidean geometry that parallel lines meet at infinity. However, my recent move to Charing Cross in Glasgow has lent evidence to a different claim. You need only look at a map of Glasgow city centre to realise that Argyle Street and St. Vincent Street are parallel. Nothing too surprising there. However, if you walk up St. Vincent Street past Charing Cross and into Finnieston, what do you find? Why, Argyle Street and St. Vincent Street merge! Now, I can't quite be sure of the exact point at which this insult to orthodoxy occurs but from a careful analysis of the environs I reckon it must be somewhere between PC World and the BP garage. I conclude from this observation, that the well known and accepted tenet 'parallel lines meet at infinity' is, in fact, a corruption (possibly dating back to Ancient Greece) of the true state of affairs: 'parallel lines meet in Finnieston'. I advise all mathematicians to revise their calculations accordingly. http://www.phobia.u-net.com/general.htm#Geometry

6 Renaissance planning This rare and unusual print of London shows the extent of the great fire of 1666 and the plan proposed for its rebuilt, usually ascribed to Robert Hooke. It originally appeared in the Theatri Europaie published in Frankfurt by the Merian heirs in 1677. http://www.microcolour. com/uk_maps.htm

7 The unplanned/misplanned? Hogarth: Beer Street, 1751Hogarth: Gin Lane, 1751

8 Glasgow, 1870

9 Town founding and design –Light’s Adelaide South Australian Association Utilitarianism Utopianism

10 Colonial town planning Public infrastructure –Public health reforms The Australian Health Society SA Public Health Acts

11 The Garden City Movement Ebenezer Howard (1850-1928) Tomorrow - a Peaceful Path to Real Reform (1898) … Garden Cities of Tomorrow (1902) Push-pull factors in urban development –town magnet –country magnet –town-and- country magnet

12 1000 acre centrally located city grand central park and civic core 5000 acres of permanent agriculture and parkland new towns connected by rail The garden city

13 Letchworth and Welwyn- Garden Cities Built


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