The presence of civic and regional survey as a locus of discussion in early British planning texts is closely associated with the involvement of the Scottish biologist planner Patrick Geddes in the early planning movement. This paper reads the Geddesian survey idea and its assimilation into planning discourse as the expression of a modern apology of planning. Geddes's understanding of survey places science and society in a relationship in which society is not merely determined by the progressive development of scientific insights. Instead, survey is understood as a process in which a growing awareness of the urban environment encourages an informed and self-conscious citizenry to take charge of its own future. In the Geddesian survey-projec...
The City is a Thinking Machine is a research project bringing together in an exhibition, Geddes’ col...
As the first editor of the Town Planning Review, Patrick Abercrombie produced a significant number o...
Over the course of the nineteenth century, while many towns and cities grew at a remarkable rate, in...
The presence of civic and regional survey as a locus of discussion in early British planning texts i...
The 100th anniversary of Geddes’ book “Cities in Evolution” has just passed, and the authors of this...
This paper examines work conducted between 1915 and 1919 by a group of architects and planners based...
This project evaluates the relevance of Geddes’ thought for today by curating an exhibition and asso...
Patrick Geddes' pioneering work in applying sociological understanding of environmental concerns to ...
We are currently working on giving meaning to the concept of ecourbanism. This paper presents the id...
The city is quickening. We hover between built space and media places. Place making that takes no he...
Jaqueline Tyrwhitt (1905–83) was a British town planner, editor, and educator. These four key Tyrwhi...
Planning originated from and has been kept alive, by input from outside its professional field. It s...
Since 2007 the proclamation of the ‘urban age’ by the UN has been heralded as a critical moment in h...
The 100th anniversary of Geddes’ book “Cities in Evolution” has just passed, and the authors of this...
Contemporary town planning practice is dominated by incremental development control processes at lo...
The City is a Thinking Machine is a research project bringing together in an exhibition, Geddes’ col...
As the first editor of the Town Planning Review, Patrick Abercrombie produced a significant number o...
Over the course of the nineteenth century, while many towns and cities grew at a remarkable rate, in...
The presence of civic and regional survey as a locus of discussion in early British planning texts i...
The 100th anniversary of Geddes’ book “Cities in Evolution” has just passed, and the authors of this...
This paper examines work conducted between 1915 and 1919 by a group of architects and planners based...
This project evaluates the relevance of Geddes’ thought for today by curating an exhibition and asso...
Patrick Geddes' pioneering work in applying sociological understanding of environmental concerns to ...
We are currently working on giving meaning to the concept of ecourbanism. This paper presents the id...
The city is quickening. We hover between built space and media places. Place making that takes no he...
Jaqueline Tyrwhitt (1905–83) was a British town planner, editor, and educator. These four key Tyrwhi...
Planning originated from and has been kept alive, by input from outside its professional field. It s...
Since 2007 the proclamation of the ‘urban age’ by the UN has been heralded as a critical moment in h...
The 100th anniversary of Geddes’ book “Cities in Evolution” has just passed, and the authors of this...
Contemporary town planning practice is dominated by incremental development control processes at lo...
The City is a Thinking Machine is a research project bringing together in an exhibition, Geddes’ col...
As the first editor of the Town Planning Review, Patrick Abercrombie produced a significant number o...
Over the course of the nineteenth century, while many towns and cities grew at a remarkable rate, in...