Discover

GARDEN CITY MOVEMENT

(Redirected from Garden City Movement)
Ebenezer Howard's 3 magnets diagram which addressed the question 'Where will the people go?', the choices being 'Town', 'Country' or 'Town-Country'

The 'garden city movement' is an approach to urban planning that was founded in 1898 by Ebenezer Howard in England. Garden cities were to be planned, self-contained communities surrounded by greenbelts, and containing carefully balanced areas of residences, industry, and agriculture.
Inspired by the Utopian novel ''Looking Backward'', Howard published '' in 1898 (reissued in 1902 as ''Garden Cities of To-morrow''), organized the Garden City Association in 1899, and founded two cities in England: Letchworth Garden City in 1903, and Welwyn Garden City in 1920. (Letchworth is commonly referred to as such, and Welwyn called by its complete name or abbreviated slightly as Welwyn Garden.) Both designs are durable successes and healthy communities today, although not a complete realization of Howard's ideals.
Howard's successor as chairman of the Garden City Association was Sir Frederic Osborn, who extended the movement into regional planning. [1]
The idea of the garden city was influential in the United States (in Newport News, Virginia's Hilton Village; Pittsburgh's Chatham Village; Sunnyside, Queens; Radburn, New Jersey; Jackson Heights, Queens; the Woodbourne neighborhood of Boston; Garden City, New York; and Baldwin Hills Village in Los Angeles) and in Canada in ( Kapuskasing, Ontario, Walkerville, Ontario). The first German garden city, Hellerau, a suburb of Dresden, was founded in 1909. The concept was drawn upon for German worker housing built during the Weimar years, and again in England after World War II when the New Towns Act triggered the development of many new communities based on Howard's egalitarian vision. The garden city movement also influenced the British urbanist Sir Patrick Geddes in the planning of Tel-Aviv, Israel. Contemporary town planning charters like New Urbanism and Principles of Intelligent Urbanism find their origins in this movement.
Today,there are many ''garden cities'' in the world. Most of them, however, exist
as just ''Dormitory suburbs'', which completely differ from what Howard wanted to create.

Contents
See also
References

See also



Car culture

Colonel Light Gardens, South Australia

Ebenezer Howard

New Urbanism

Bedford Park, London

Milton Keynes

Ciudad Jardín, Buenos Aires

Charles Reade (town planner)

Transit Oriented Development

Tapiola

European Urban Renaissance

Hellerau

References


1. History of the TCPA 1899-1999


This article provided by Wikipedia. To edit the contents of this article, click here for original source.

psst.. try this: add to faves