ABSTRACT

In 1969 Ian McHarg laid out a new approach to land-use planning. His seminal work, Design by Nature, blazed the trail for sustainable urban development. The road was paved with good intentions. But where exactly did it lead? And where do we go from here?

Reconsidering Ian McHarg offers a fresh assessment of McHarg’s lessons and legacy. It applauds his call for environmental stewardship while acknowledging its unintended results. For McHarg’s idyllic developments at the edge of nature turned greenfield sites into suburban communities. They added to sprawl and made America more dependent on cars. And they may even have delayed the kind of urban redevelopment needed to make today’s cities more sustainable.

chapter 1|17 pages

Design with Nature

Promises and Pitfalls

chapter 2|12 pages

The American Wilderness

An Evanescing Myth

chapter 3|13 pages

Cities

Our Abode

chapter 4|21 pages

Building, Dwelling, Greening

chapter 5|24 pages

From Green to White

Ecology as a Design Ethic

chapter 6|17 pages

Localism

A Participatory Ecology

chapter 7|20 pages

On Public Art

chapter 8|17 pages

Dallas

In Search of an Urban Future

chapter 9|20 pages

Toward a Climax City

chapter 10|13 pages

Beyond, Ahead