Five decades ago, interstate highways radically changed the landscape of the US. It brought economic prosperity and convenience to drive, but with the expenses of the life of historically underserved communities. This thesis aims to uncover the dark history of interstate highway construction, which left an everlasting scar on spaces by intentionally destroying the settlements of Black and low-income communities. With the concept of spatial exclusion, this thesis analyzes the intentions behind and impacts of interstate highway construction, particularly related to the built environment. The historical records Atlanta, GA, Birmingham, AL, and Miami, FL vividly exhibits the unjust intentions to remove Black neighborhoods using interstate highw...
“Remapping America: The Interstate Highway System and Infrastructural Governance in the Postwar Unit...
spatial configuration; spatial morphology; urban growth; urban morphology; morphological history The...
Author Institution: Department of Urban Studies, The University of AkronThe greatest effects of the ...
During the mid-twentieth century, cities across the United States underwent drastic changes known br...
In 1959, the Minnesota Department of Highways (MHD), renamed the Minnesota Department of Transportat...
Historical research has shown that the construction of the U.S. Interstate Highway System from the 1...
Yanich, DaniloThe following paper looks at the way in which interstate highways in five eastern-Amer...
Equity does not exist for all citizens with access to a clean, safe, and stable environment. In our ...
ABSTRACT The physical growth of the city has historically been determined by the form and scale of t...
Thesis (M.C.P.)--Massachusetts Institute of Technology, Dept. of Urban Studies and Planning, 2004.In...
Spatial equity plays an important role in the planning process. Whether or not a city can provide re...
The “highway to nowhere” is a 1.32 mile fragment of an arterial expressway located in Baltimore, Mar...
Overtown, once the center of African American life in Miami, lost 40% of its population when Interst...
Freeways have had a strong influence not only on the urban transportation but also on downtown areas...
In the postwar era, Democratic voters have become increasingly more likely than Republican voters to...
“Remapping America: The Interstate Highway System and Infrastructural Governance in the Postwar Unit...
spatial configuration; spatial morphology; urban growth; urban morphology; morphological history The...
Author Institution: Department of Urban Studies, The University of AkronThe greatest effects of the ...
During the mid-twentieth century, cities across the United States underwent drastic changes known br...
In 1959, the Minnesota Department of Highways (MHD), renamed the Minnesota Department of Transportat...
Historical research has shown that the construction of the U.S. Interstate Highway System from the 1...
Yanich, DaniloThe following paper looks at the way in which interstate highways in five eastern-Amer...
Equity does not exist for all citizens with access to a clean, safe, and stable environment. In our ...
ABSTRACT The physical growth of the city has historically been determined by the form and scale of t...
Thesis (M.C.P.)--Massachusetts Institute of Technology, Dept. of Urban Studies and Planning, 2004.In...
Spatial equity plays an important role in the planning process. Whether or not a city can provide re...
The “highway to nowhere” is a 1.32 mile fragment of an arterial expressway located in Baltimore, Mar...
Overtown, once the center of African American life in Miami, lost 40% of its population when Interst...
Freeways have had a strong influence not only on the urban transportation but also on downtown areas...
In the postwar era, Democratic voters have become increasingly more likely than Republican voters to...
“Remapping America: The Interstate Highway System and Infrastructural Governance in the Postwar Unit...
spatial configuration; spatial morphology; urban growth; urban morphology; morphological history The...
Author Institution: Department of Urban Studies, The University of AkronThe greatest effects of the ...