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1930s Regional Planning Association of America

1930s Regional Planning Association of America 1923-1933 — Met informally for a period of only 10 years Created some of the most significant h ousing and community prototypes in America.

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1930s Regional Planning Association of America

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  1. 1930s Regional Planning Association of America 1923-1933 — Met informally for a period of only 10 years Created some of the most significant housing and community prototypes in America. Proposed the development of pedestrian-scaled Garden Cities, surrounded by greenbelts and arranged in networks. These autonomous communities were intended to replace the big city and the metropolitan organization of the region, sited instead within a regionally managed landscape.

  2. 1930s Regional Planning Association of America The planners called for a redistribution of development and a massive reappraisal of land as resource. Neighborhoods would be organized around superblocks large enough to contain an interior green and penetrated at the edge by houses on cul de sacs. Pedestrian paths, made continuous with road underpasses, would crisscross the green and become the chief network of the circulation, while also separating children from the dangers of automobile traffic. All these structures would together make a neighborhood unit, limited in size by comfortable walking distance and organized around a school.

  3. 1930s Regional Planning Association of America Several neighborhood units would make up a town with public spaces, institutions and cooperative systems for housework, shopping and child care. Radburn, New Jersey, was the first real prototype of these ideas.

  4. 1930s Greentowns Program During the New Deal period of public works projects and demonstration towns, the federal government adopted some of the regionalist plans for the Greentowns Program — a series of greenbelt communities to be built around major American cities.

  5. 1930s Greentowns Program Two members of the president's "brain trust" were also sympathetic to the ideas of the RPAA: Stuart Chase and Rexford Guy Tugwell. Under Tugwell's administration, the Federal Emergency Relief Administration and the Subsistence Homestead Division of the Department of the Interior merged into the Resettlement Administration and pursued a number of approaches to the small community including agricultural and industrial demonstration towns. Tugwell had many detractors in the conservative congress who regarded his so called "Tugwell Towns" as socialist and un-American, but his access to the president assured passage and funding for the Greentown program.

  6. 1930s Greentowns Program Funds were allotted by the Relief Act of 1935. Several possible town sites were quickly chosen, and work began immediately and proceeded swiftly to produce employment. The history of this experiment in town planning marks a turning point in political sentiments during the New Deal period that was to have ramifications in all the various New Deal agencies and programs. The most prominent professional planners of the day were enlisted in the Greentowns project. Of the 25 potential sites, four were finally chosen for development and assigned chief planners. Two of the four were planned for the east coast. Greenbelt near Washington, Greenbrook near New Brunswick, Greenhills near Cincinnati and Greendale near Milwaukee.

  7. 1930s Greentowns Program In 1935, New Jersey citizens in Franklin Township, the site of the Greenbrook project filed injunctions against the U.S. Resettlement Administration, and against Tugwell himself. This eventually resulted in a 1936 decision ruling that the Emergency Relief Act wasunconstitutional. [Conkin 173-174] Just months after the court decision which crippled the Green Towns, President Roosevelt, speaking of Greenbelt Maryland. was quoted in the New York Times as saying, "It was an experiment that ought to be copied by every community in the United States."

  8. 1930s Greentowns Program Greenbelt, Maryland

  9. 1930s Greentowns Program Greenbelt, Maryland

  10. 1930s Greentowns Program Greenbelt, Maryland

  11. 1930s Greentowns Program The other Greentown projects continued, perhaps fueled by the intelligence of the many illustrious architects involved. The planning philosophy was largely consistent throughout all three projects. They internally demonstrated the town planning principles of the RPAA: • the Neighborhood Unit, • the superblock, • the separation of pedestrian and vehicular traffic.

  12. 1930s Greentowns Program The group housing for Greenbelt seemed to refer to European International Style housing projects. Many were built of painted brick with details faintly expressive of early 20th century modernism: of spatial overlap and extension, efficiency and biological determinism. Public buildings like the shopping center at Greenbelt and the schools in both Greenbelt and Greenhills were gleaming white structures similar to many WPA projects of the period in that they hybridized sturdy American proportions with heroic imagery of the worker.

  13. 1930s Greentowns Program Greendale on the other hand was among the only federally subsidized demonstrations towns to use detached housing. Rejecting European affectations, its planner, Elbert Peets referred instead to early American precedent for cul de sac and streets, hybridizing these with RPAA arrangements. Small set backs returned volume to the residential street and the detached house worked in concert with a small garage structure to create front, back and side yard volumes.

  14. 1930s Greentowns Program Greendale, Wisconsin

  15. 1930s Greentowns Program Greendale, Wisconsin

  16. 1930s Greentowns Program Greendale, Wisconsin

  17. 1930s Greentowns Program Greendale, Wisconsin

  18. 1930s Greentowns Program Greendale, Wisconsin

  19. 1930s Greentowns Program Residents were targeted by the press as being docile citizens of a regimented or communistic community. And though the government did embrace this idea for a time, in the face of cost overruns and a conservative Congress that regarded the projects as "pink," the Greentowns were never supported as a model for postwar suburbia. The subsistence homesteads were gradually transferred to individual homestead associations. Government property in the Greentowns was also liquidated and sold to citizen groups. By 1943 these communities were "forced back into the traditional patterns of complete individual ownership, private enterprise, and local control."

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