For sixty years, engineers and planners have debated the freeway’s role in the city. Engineers have tended to view freeways strictly in traffic service terms. Planners, on the other hand, have long viewed freeways not only as a means of facilitating automobile transportation but also as a tool for reshaping the city. This paper uses the plans of Harland Bartholomew and Robert Moses to illustrate these competing visions of the freeway. In the end, the traffic-service vision of the engineers emerged victorious as a result of state and federal highway finance decisions, and this victory has carried with it a high price for many American cities
in Washington, DC, 100 ago, the delegates failed to foresee the consequences of auto-mobility and su...
Citations of sources, conclusions, or opinions expressed in this publication are the responsibilit...
The central issue explored is the role or demands placed upon the large-city highways of today, and ...
Freeways have profoundly influenced the form and function of U.S. cities, yet urban planners general...
ABSTRACT The physical growth of the city has historically been determined by the form and scale of t...
A scientific consensus has recently emerged suggesting that the dominant twentieth century paradigm ...
Freeways are catalysts in shaping the land-use patterns within the modern metropolis, and exert a po...
Mark Rose’s Interstate: Express Highway Politics (1979) and Bruce Seely’s Building the American High...
Yanich, DaniloThe following paper looks at the way in which interstate highways in five eastern-Amer...
Highway controversies and anti-highway coalitions have emerged in the 1960's and 1970's to inhibit t...
This is a case study of decision making on urban freeways in American cities using Syracuse, New Yor...
The unbuilt project of Panhandle Freeway in San Francisco from the early 1960s is a unique case in t...
The freeway revolts were a phenomenon that took place across the nation during the 1960s and 1970s. ...
Focusing on plans and planning debates can obscure the critical role that public finance plays in sh...
Though its route cleaved to a 19th century rail corridor, building the urban extension of the Massac...
in Washington, DC, 100 ago, the delegates failed to foresee the consequences of auto-mobility and su...
Citations of sources, conclusions, or opinions expressed in this publication are the responsibilit...
The central issue explored is the role or demands placed upon the large-city highways of today, and ...
Freeways have profoundly influenced the form and function of U.S. cities, yet urban planners general...
ABSTRACT The physical growth of the city has historically been determined by the form and scale of t...
A scientific consensus has recently emerged suggesting that the dominant twentieth century paradigm ...
Freeways are catalysts in shaping the land-use patterns within the modern metropolis, and exert a po...
Mark Rose’s Interstate: Express Highway Politics (1979) and Bruce Seely’s Building the American High...
Yanich, DaniloThe following paper looks at the way in which interstate highways in five eastern-Amer...
Highway controversies and anti-highway coalitions have emerged in the 1960's and 1970's to inhibit t...
This is a case study of decision making on urban freeways in American cities using Syracuse, New Yor...
The unbuilt project of Panhandle Freeway in San Francisco from the early 1960s is a unique case in t...
The freeway revolts were a phenomenon that took place across the nation during the 1960s and 1970s. ...
Focusing on plans and planning debates can obscure the critical role that public finance plays in sh...
Though its route cleaved to a 19th century rail corridor, building the urban extension of the Massac...
in Washington, DC, 100 ago, the delegates failed to foresee the consequences of auto-mobility and su...
Citations of sources, conclusions, or opinions expressed in this publication are the responsibilit...
The central issue explored is the role or demands placed upon the large-city highways of today, and ...