ABSTRACT

Windows Upon Planning History delves into a wide range of perspectives on urbanism from Europe, Australia and the USA to investigate the effects of changing perceptions and different ways of seeing cities and urban regions. Fischer, Altrock and a team of 13 distinguished authors examine how and why the ideologies and the processes of city making changed in modern and post-modern times.

Illustrated with over 45 images, the themes addressed in the book range from the changing outlook on Berlin’s historic apartment districts and their demolition, salvation and gentrification to how planning was deployed to support dictatorship; from the shattering of myths like democracies totally departing from preceding dictatorships to the model of the post-war modern city and its fate towards the end of the twentieth century.

The volume combines case studies of cities on three continents with reflections on the historiography and the state of planning history.

With a foreword by Stephen V. Ward, this book will appeal to a wide readership interested in the histories of planning, architecture and cities.

part 1|11 pages

Introduction

part 2|64 pages

Planning history and the windows metaphor – legacies and current challenges

chapter 2|14 pages

Windows through a window

A philosophical view

chapter 3|7 pages

The Janus principle

chapter 4|12 pages

How many histories

Notes on the tradition of urban history and the reasons that force us to change – changing windows upon the city

part 3|106 pages

Eye-openers and long-range perspectives – case studies

chapter 7|21 pages

Coventry

A model of modernist reconstruction

chapter 9|17 pages

Transportation planning in Boston

A paradigm of progress, opposition, and reversals

chapter 10|21 pages

Identities of the urban region

‘Copernican turnarounds’?

chapter 11|11 pages

Discoveries behind the curtains

The ‘Zero Hour’ myth after the fall of the wall

part 4|79 pages

Presentations and paradigms

chapter 13|17 pages

Urbanism and dictatorship – overcoming tunnel vision

Three exhibitions in Salazar’s Lisbon: 1940, 1941 and 1952

chapter 14|11 pages

Heritage, community activism and urban development

A Window on the personification of planning history

part 5|6 pages

Conclusions