Visual Planning and Urbanism in the Mid-Twentieth Century: Conference at Newcastle Upon Tyne, Uk, 11-13 September 2007
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Erten, Erdem
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Abstract
Planning attitudes with a particular focus on visual and three-dimensional planning have been
insufficiently studied in histories of modernism. This conference, sponsored by the UK Arts and
Humanities Research Council, focused on ‘a strand of more practical urbanism, modernist in flavour but
historically informed [which sought] to recover positive conceptions of the city and town after the
perceived deprivations of the nineteenth century’. Dealing with a timespan similar to that of narratives
of modernist planning which targeted a radical reformation of the city – from the CIAM doctrine codified by the Athens Charter to the de-urbanist proposals of Frank Lloyd Wright’s Broadacre City – most of the attitudes discussed in the conference papers remained critical of such radical restructuring.
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Urban development, Urban planning
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Volume
12
Issue
1
Start Page
49
End Page
51
