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Arpln 423

The document provides a historical overview of the influences on urban planning from Classical and Medieval Europe through to modern times. Some key influences and developments include: Hippodamus who is considered the first town planner and introduced orthogonal urban layouts in Ancient Greece; the establishment of new towns and cities with regular plans throughout Classical and Medieval Europe; Renaissance cities like Florence adopting star-shaped layouts; Ebenezer Howard's "Garden City" concept in the late 19th century; modernist planning schemes in the 1920s like Le Corbusier's "Contemporary City"; and the development of the urban planning profession in the early 20th century.
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0% found this document useful (0 votes)
13 views3 pages

Arpln 423

The document provides a historical overview of the influences on urban planning from Classical and Medieval Europe through to modern times. Some key influences and developments include: Hippodamus who is considered the first town planner and introduced orthogonal urban layouts in Ancient Greece; the establishment of new towns and cities with regular plans throughout Classical and Medieval Europe; Renaissance cities like Florence adopting star-shaped layouts; Ebenezer Howard's "Garden City" concept in the late 19th century; modernist planning schemes in the 1920s like Le Corbusier's "Contemporary City"; and the development of the urban planning profession in the early 20th century.
Copyright
© © All Rights Reserved
We take content rights seriously. If you suspect this is your content, claim it here.
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GUINDELYN T.

BUDIONGAN probably were inspired by Greek and


Hellenic examples, as well as by
BS ARCHITECTURE 4-A
regularly planned cities that were built
ArPln 423 by the Estruscans in Italy.
 Urban development in the early Middle
Ages, characteristically focused on a
HISTORICAL OVERVIEW AND INFLUENCES OF fortress, a fortified abbey.
URBAN PLANNING  In the 9th to 14th centuries, many
hundreds of new towns were built in
Europe, and many others were enlarged
Classical and Medieval Europe with newly planned extensions.
 The deep depression around the middle
 Hippodamus, a Greek philosopher who
of the 1th century marked the end of
is regarded as the first town planner and
the period of great urban expansion.
‘inventor’ of the orthogonal urban
layout. Renaissance Europe
 Aristotle called him “The Father of City
 Florence was an early model of the new
Planning.”
urban planning, which took on a star-
 From about the late 8th century on,
shaped layout adapted from the new
Greek city-states started to found
star fort, designed to resist cannon fire.
colonies along the coast of the
 Filarete’s ideal city, building on Leone
Mediterranean, which were centered on
Battista Alberti’s De re aedificatoria, was
newly created towns and cities with
named “Sforzinda” in compliment to his
more or less regular orthogonal plans.
patron; its twelve-pointed shape,
 After the city of Miletus was destroyed
circumscribable by a “perfect”
by the Persians in 494 BCE, it was built
Pythagorean figure, the circle, took no
in regular form that, according to
heed of its undulating terrain in
tradition, was determined by the ideas
Filarete’s manuscript.
of Hippodamus of Miletus.
 The bombardment of Brussels by French
 Following in the tradition of
troops of Louis XIV on August 13, 14 and
Hippodamus about a century later,
15, 1695 and the resulting fire were
Alexander commissioned Dinocrates the
together the most destructive event in
Architect to layout his new City of
the entire history of Brussels. The Grand
Alexandria, the grandest example of
Place was destroyed along with a third
idealized urban planning of the ancient
of the buildings in the city
Hellenistic world, where the city’s
regularity was facilitated by its level site Enlightenment Europe
near a mouth of the Nile.
 During this period, rulers often
 The ancient Romans also employed
embarked on ambitious attempts at
regular orthogonal structures on which
redesigning their capital cities as a
they molded their colonies. They
showpiece for the grandeur of the  IN 1910, Thomas Adams was appointed
nation. Disasters were often a major as the first Town Planning Inspector at
catalyst for planned reconstruction. the Local Government Board, and
 Great Fire of 1666, improvements were began meeting with practitioners.
made in hygiene and fire safety with  The Town Planning Institute was
wider streets, stone construction and established in 1914 with a mandate to
access to the river. advance the study of town-planning
 In 1852, Baron Georges-Eugene and civic design. The first university
Haussmann was commissioned to course in America was established at
remodel the Medieval street plan of the Harvard University in 1924.
city by demolishing swathes of the old
MODERNISM
quarters and laying out wide
boulevards, extending outwards beyond  In the 1920’s, the ideas of modernism
the old city limits. began to surface in urban planning.
 Spanish civil engineer, Ildefonso Cerda,  The influential modernist architect Le
invented the term ‘urbanization in 1860- Corbusier presented his scheme for a
1861. His theory was the first in modern “Contemporary City” for three million
times to focus methodically on the city inhabitants (Ville Contemporaine) in
as a construction, its evolution and the 1922.
workings and interaction of its
NEW TOWNS
constituent parts.
 Ebenezer Howard’s urban planning
Modern Urban Planning
concepts were only adopted on a large
GARDEN CITY scale after World War II.
 The New Towns Act 1946 resulted many
 The first major urban planning theorist
New Towns being constructed in Britain
was Sir Ebenezer Howard, who
over the following decades.
initiated the garden city movement in
1898. URBAN PLANNING IN COMMUNIST
 Howard’s ides, although utopian, were COUNTRIES
also highly practical and were adopted
 Urban planning was popular in the
around the world in the ensuing
Soviet Union and other socialist
decades.
countries in the period of 1929-1989.
 His idealized garden city would house
32,000 people on a site of 6,000 acres Reactions
(2,428 ha), planned on a concentric
 Modernist planning fell into decline in
pattern with open spaces, public parks
the 1970’s when the construction of
and six radial boulevards, 120 ft (37m)
cheap, uniform tower blocks ended in
wide, extending from the center.
the most countries, such as Britain and
URBAN PLANNING PROFESSION France.
 Since then many have been demolished
and replaced by other housing types.
Rather than attempting to eliminate all
disorder, planning now concentrates on
individualism and diversity in society
and the economy; this is the post-
modernist era.
New Urbanism

 Various current movements in urban


design seek to create sustainable urban
environments with long-lasting
structures, buildings and a great
livability for its inhabitants.
 The most clearly defined form of
walkable urbanism is known as the
Charter of New Urbanism. It is an
approach for successfully reducing
environmental impacts by altering the
built environment to create and
preserve smart cities that support
sustainable transport
INFLUENCES

 Urban design can influence health and


social and cultural impacts of locality.
 Urban design can influence the
economic success and socio-economic
composition of a locality.
 Urban design determines the physical
scale, space and ambience of a place
and establishes the built and natural
forms within which individual buildings
and infrastructure are sited.

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