History of Planning (The Green Book, 2nd Ed., Planetizen On-line course, wikipedia.com, APA factbook)
- Prior to 1890
- 3 Periods (Colonial Era, Period of Expansion/westward migration, and years following the Civil war)
- 1790 – firs US Census
- Colonial tradition: preplanned communities norm for early colonial settlements
- Law of Indies fixed form of Spanish cities in the Americas
- Several US cities (New Haven, Philly, Detroit, Savannah) laid out in grid pattern
- Early settlements consisted of homes, streets, public spaces, churches, gov building
- Early republic
- Ordinance of 1785 established a system of rectangular survey coordinates, this opened the door to settlement of the American West
- L’Enfant commissioned to design capital
- radial plan, centered on Capitol and White House, connected by large diagonal boulevard (Pennsylvania Ave)
- lots of public open space and plazas, malls
- Andrew Ellicott completes L’Enfant’s task
- Large scale city plans developed early 1800’s (Detroit, New York) – grid patter to maximize efficiency
- 1803 – Louisana Purchase (800,000 square miles) – doubles nations size
- 1811 – Cumberland Road is the first major road in the US constructed with federal funds (Cumberland, MY to Columbus, OH)
- 1817 – Erie Canal is begun, operational in 1825
- Expansion
- 1830 – small grid plan laid out at site of Chicago
- 1830 – 1840 NY tenements (for waves of European immigrants)
- industrial cities – based on railroad transportation, need many works, which resulted in lots of tenement housing around factory sites
- Frederick Law Olmsted and Calvert Vaux – Central Park design in 1851
- 1862 – Homestead Act
- Postwar Era/Turn of the century
- 1867 – 1stNew York tenement housing law is enacted
- 1867 – San Fran passes first land use zoning restriction (obnoxious uses)
- 1867 – purchase of Alaska
- 1872 – Yellowstone is first national park
- 1879 – tenements laws expanded – now narrow air shaft is required between adjacent structures, also required 2 toilets)
- 1878 – John Wesley Powell – Report on the Lands of the Arid Region of the UnitedState (includes a proposed regional plan to foster settlement and conserve water resources)
- 1877 – Munn v. Illinois: paved the way for future government intervention in land use (when property is devoted to a use having a public interest, owner must submit to be controlled by the public for the common good)
- Jacob Riis – How the Other Half Lives, Children of the Poor
- 1890v. 1892 – Chicago’s World Fair (Colombian Expansion) – white city, Daniel Burnham
- City Beautiful Movement – Daniel Burnham
- Garden Cities – Ebenezer Howard
- 1897 – first underground railroad constructed in Boston
- 1900 – 1920
- 1901- New Law (tenement law)
- Provisions of law
- required permits for construction, alteration and conversion
- required inspections
- penalties for construction
- Building condition requirement
- space for light and air between structures
- toilet and running water for each apartment
- 1902 – US Reclamation Act – uses funds from the sale of public lands to finance water storage and irrigation projects
- 1909 – first national planning conference (National Conference on City Planning and Congestion Relief), WashingtonDC;
first city planning course – Harvard - New era of plans
- McMillan Plan (1902) – for the development of WashingtonD.C.
- McMillan Commission – named by Sen. James McMillan, Daniel Burnham, Frederick Law Olmsted Jr., Charles McKim)
- Inspired by the original 1791 plan for the City by Pierre L’Enfant
- American Republican Progressive movement
- Garden Cities, Ebenezer Howard
- 1903 – letchworth, England (designed as a City of 35,000 surrounded by greenbelt)
- Hampstead Garden Suburb, London (designed by Raymond Unwin) – first comprehensive neighborhood design
- 1903 – Cleveland Group Plan, Burnham, Carrere, Brunner (stimulated civic plans throughout the US)
- 1903 – firs national wildlife reguge established by Theodore Roosevelt at Pelican Island, FL
- 1904 – Plan for San Francisco, Burnham and Edward Bennett (one of 1st major cities to apply City Beautiful principles)
- 1907 – Hartford Commission, Connecticut (first official, local, and permanent town planning board in the US)
- 1907 – 1,285,000 immigrants, flooded tenements
- 1909 – Burnham creates first metropolitan-regional plan for Chicago
- large area with outer belt of regional parks and reservations
- radial and concentric highways
- lakefront park system
- straightened Chicago River
- 1909 – Wisconsin passes first state enabling act granting municipalities
- 1909 – Los Angeles passes land use zoning ordinance, creating zones for undeveloped land
- 2nd Decade, by 1910 92 million Americans
- 46% urban, 50 cities with over 100,000 residents
- Forest Hills , Frederick Las Olmsted – served as a model for suburban land development
- 1912 – Supreme Court case Eubank v City of Richmond finds that municipal control of the horizontal location of buildings on private property (via setback legislation) is constitutional
- 1912 – Walter Moody publishes Wacker’s Manual of the Plan of Chicago – used as an 8th grade textbook
- 1913 – Federal Reserve Act – creat4ed Federal Reserve as central bank
- 1914 – Carrying Out the City Plan (first major text on city planning)
- 1915 – Hadacheck v Sebastian, regulation not precluded by fact the values on investments prior to regulation would be diminished by the regulation (essentially validated zoning)
- 1916 – New York Cityzoning code, first comprehensive zoning code
- 1916 – Federal-Aid Road Act – provided assistance for state highway construction (4.7 million cars by 1917)
- 1916 – National Park Service established
- 1917 – American City Planning Institute (ACPI), precursor to AICP, formed (Frederick Law Olmsted, Jr. – first president)
- US became an urban nations as it entered the 1920’s (51% of population lives in urban areas)
- 1920 – 1940: decades of contrast
- 1920’s – prosperity enabled first massive migration of middle-income people to the suburbs
- Focus of planning on undeveloped areas and subdivision controls.
- City Efficient and City Administrative begins replacing the City Beautiful movement
- City Efficient
- City Administrative
- 1921 – New Orleans creates nations first historic commission, Vieux Carre (French Quarter) becomes historic district in 1937
- 1922 – Pennsylvania Coal v. Mahon – if a regulation goes too far, it will be a taking, established regulatory takings
- 1922 – Los AngelesCounty creates first county planning board
- 1922 – JC Nichols creates world’s first automobile-oriented shopping center, County Club Plaza, Kansas City
- 1924 – Standard State Zoning Enabling Act, US Dept of Commerce under Herbert Hoover
- 1925 – Cincinnati adopts first comprehensive plan, Alfred Bettman
- 1925 – first issue of City Planning is published (JAPA’s predececssor)
- 1926 – Village of Euclid v Ambler Realty Co – established the constitutionality of zoning
- 1927 – 810,000 dwelling units built
- 1928 – Radburn, NJ, Stein and H. Wright
- Superblocks, parks in center bounded by 2-story SF houses
- Separation of pedestrian and vehicular traffic
- 1928 – StandardCity Planning Enabling Act (US Dept of Commerce)
- Clarence Perry – neighborhood unit as the basic block of the city (elementary school at enter, bounded by arterial streets at the perimeter)
- Regional Survey of New York and its Environments (1928)
- 1930’s – Depression, focus on creating massive public works projects
- New Deal – focused mainly on unemployment, supported planning for the future (detailed studies, projections, economists, statisticians, and sociologists, etc)
- 1933 – first national planning board (abolished 1943)
- 1933 – Tennessee Valley Authority – independent, multifunctional governmental regional planning agency (flood protection, water management, recreational developments, power generation)
- 1933 – 1941 Public Works Administration provided employment through the construction of public works projects
- 1934 - Federal Housing Administration (FHA) created, basis for housing standards, Public Works Administration created (PWA)
- FHA provided government insurance for private home loans – removed financial risk, minimum standards for housing
- First federally supported public housing constructed in Cleveland, first to be occupied – Atlanta)
- 1934 – American Society of Planning Officials (ASPO), A Bettman first president
- 1935 – Resettlement Administration
- Greenbelt towns – assist in local employment and create model communities to guide future development
- Modified neighborhood units
- Greenbelt MY, Greenhills, OH, Greendale, WI, Greenbrook, NJ (not built)
- Social Security Act of 1935
- Housing Act of 1937, provide FHA mortgage insurance
- 1939 – American City Planning Institute (ACPI) renamed American Institute of Planners (AIP)
- 1940 – 1960:
- War and after
- Early part of decade, war planning essentially replaced city planning
- 1944 – GI Bill (Serviceman’s Readjustment Act), provided loans for homes to veterans accelerating growth of suburbs
- After 1945 – vast suburban expansion, heavily influenced highway construction, national prosperity, and FHA and VA housing programs
- large suburbs, manufacturing plants begin to move from core of city
- 1945 – Pennsylvania passes first state urban renewal act (Golden Triangle in Pittsburgh)
- FHA suburban housing projects
- 1947 – Levittown, NY,
- 1948 – Park Forest, IL
- Town and CountyShopping Center (Miracle Mile) – first regional shopping center (1949)
- Housing Act of 1949 – federal program for central city redevelopment
- 1949 – National Trust for Historic Preservation
- 1950 – suburban fringe areas increasing in population
- Housing Act of 1954, rehabilitation, housing codes
- Included citizen participation in redevelopment processes (Urban Renewal)
- Required urban renewal projects to be part of comprehensive plan
- 1954 – Berman v. Parker – redevelopment agency can condemn properties that are unsightly, not deteriorated, if required to achieve objectives of adopted plan
- 1954 – Brown v. Board of Education – school integration
- 1956 – Interstate Highway Act - $ for over 40,000 miles of limited-access highways connecting nation
- 1958 – first Urban growth boundary, Lexington and Fayette County, Kentucky
- Housing Act of 1959 - $ for preparation of comprehensive plans
- 1960 – 1980: by 1960 70% of nations pop lived in urban areas
- 1961 – congress authorizes housing sale with land, stimulating condo developments
- 1961 – Hawaii first state to introduce statewide zoning
- 1962 – New Jersey became the first state to license the practice of planning
- 1964 – Civil Rights Act, no discrimination in places of public accommodation
- 1965 – Department of Housing and Urban Development (HUD), cabinet level position (Robert Weaver – first secretary)
- Housing and Urban Development Act of 1965 – extensive, provides rental supplements, low interest loans, subsidies
- 1965 – Water Quality Act
- 1965 – Economic Development Administration – provided federal support for local economic development
- Model Cities program – attack on urban blight and poverty, part of President Johnson’s Greta Society program
- Jones v Alfred H Mayer Co., finds that Civil Rights Acts prohibits racial discrimination in housing
- 1966 – National Historic Preservation Act – established National Register of Historic Places
- Late 1960’s planned unit developments gain popularity
- Cheney v. Village 2 at New Hope. The Court in 1968 found that planned unit developments are acceptable if the regulations focus on density requirements rather than specific rules for each lot.
- 1969 – Circular A-95: required regional planning agency review (helped establish regional planning)
- 1969 – NEPA, requires and EIS for every federal (or project with federal funding) that may harm environment
- New Federalism – many programs terminated, replaced with decentralized programs and federal revenue sharing
- 1970– EPA established
- 1971 – American Institute of Planners (AIP) adopts Code of Ethics
- 1972 – Bay Area Rapid Transit (BART) begins
- 1972 – Clean Water Act
- 1973 – Endangered Species Act
- OregonLand Use Act – created statewide planning system and identified an UGB
- 1974 – Community Development Block Grant (CDBG) – revenue sharing
- 1974 – Safe Drinking water ct
- 1977 – 1st exam for AIP membership administered
- 1978 – Urban Development Action Grant (UDAG) – assist distressed communities through leveraging
- 1970 – Dayton, OH allocated fairshare of housing throughout region
- MountLaurel v NAACP – court affirmed land use can’t eliminate opportunity for low and moderate income housing
- Okwood at Madison v Thownship of Madison et. Al – town must provide regional fair share of low and moderate housing
- Village of Arlington Heights v. Metropolitan Housing Development Corporation, if there is no record of an intent to discriminate in an exclusionary ordinance, act of discrimination does not exist
- 1976 – Supreme Court upholds referendum requirement (Eastlake, OH)
- 1976 – Young v. American Mini Theaters, upheld adult zoning as a way to maintain neighborhood character
- Growth Management & the Environment
- 1970 – Enviornmental Polilcy Act and environmental Protection Agency
- required environmental impact statements
- Growth Management cases
- Golden v Ramapo – court upholds towns requirement that permits are contingent on infrastructure, utilities, parks, etc (1972)
- Construction Industry Association of Sonoma County v Petaluma – building permit quotas (1971)
- Historic preservation
- 1978 – Boston Faneuil hall marketplace adaptation
- Penn Central v New York – company not entitled to compensation when terminal designated historic
- 1978 – AIP and ASPO consolidate into the APA
- 1978 – Urban Park and Recreation Recovery Act – provided for matching grants to renovate and improve parks
- Since 1980: 226.5 million people; 76% urban, many large cities still losing population
- 1980 – CRCLA (Comprehensive Response, Compensation and Liability Act) passed by congress (Superfund Bill), taxes polluting industries, uses $ to clean up polluted sites where individual responsibility is not known
- 1981 – enterprise zones provide incentives to investors for certain depressed areas of cities, enterprise zone legislation adopted by 25 states
- 1981 – Metromedia v. City of San Diego, struck down ordinance prohibiting off-site billboards as a violation of free speech
- San Diego Gas and Electric Co v City of San Diego – gov might be held liable for $ damages for a temporary taking from land use regulation
- Wilson and Voss v. County of McHenry – zoning regulation requiring minimum ¼ square mile lot in ag zones upheld, preservation of farmland is a valid public purpose and reasonable b/c its based on adopted comp plan
- Many programs cut or eliminated in early 1980’s, unemployment high, poverty increased
- Since 1980 – 90% of population growth in south and west
- 1983 – Mt.Laurel, all municipalities (in NJ) must build their fair-share of affordable housing, precedent-setting blow against racial segregation
- 1987 – FirstEnglishEvangelicalLutheranChurch v. County of Los Angles – even a temporary taking requires compensation
- 1987 – Nolan v. California Costal Commission – land use restrictions must be tied directly to a specific public purpose (permit conditions requiring public access easement dedication found invalid) – rational nexus
- 1991 – ISTEA (Intermodal Surface Transportation Efficiency Act
- coordination between land use and transportation planning
- required coordination between states and metropolitan areas for air quality
- higher levels of public participation
- 1992 – Lucas v. South Carolina Costal Council – limits local and state governments ability to restrict private without compensation, established total takings test
- 1994 - Dolan v. City of Tigard – a jurisdiction must show rough proportionality between the adverse impacts of a proposed development and the exactions being imposed on the developer (land dedication not related to proposed development)
- 1994 – NAFTA (North American Free Trade Agreement) , US Canada, and Mexico
- 1994 – Empowerment Zones/Enterprise Zones – federal funds for distressed urban areas to make them competitive with suburban counterparts, used incentives (prop tax, sales tax reductions, wage credits, low-interest financing) to jump start economy
- 1994 – Executive Order on environmental justice
- 1996 – Telecommunications Act – to reduce regulatory barriers to market entry and competition
- 1998 – Transportation Equity Act for the 21st Century (TEA-21)
- emphasized transit as an alterative to highway expansion
- new elements – focus on safety, protection of environment, advancing economic growth and competitiveness
- allows for flexibility in using funds for transit, alternative modes, historic preservation
- 2000 – President Clinton creates 8 new national monuments
- ReligiousLand Use and Institutionalized Persons Act (RLUIPA) - 2000
- 2005 – Kelo v. City of New London, economic development is permissible as a public use for purposes of eminent domain
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