URP 110-INTRODUCTION
TO PLANNING AND THE
 BUILT ENVIRONMENT
      LECTURE 3
 INTRODUCTION TO
  RULING IDEAS IN
SETTLEMENT MAKING
    1.
INDUSTRIAL
  TOWNS
1. There was no control over air pollution either,
   so factory smoke and smog were a regular fact
   of life.
2. London, and the cities in the midlands and
   north of the country were the unhealthiest
   places to live.
3. Disease spread rapidly, especially among the
   urban poor. Cholera, smallpox and typhoid were
   common causes of death.
4. Modern Urban and Regional Planning has
   arisen in response to specific social and
   economic problems.
5. Triggered off by the Industrial Revolution at the
   end of the eighteenth century.
2. GARDEN
   CITY
MOVEMENT
1.   Ebenezer Howard (1850-1928) was an urban planner from Britain.
2.   He was the founder of the English Garden City movement, which had a
     worldwide impact on urban planning.
3.   Published Garden Cities of Tomorrow (1898), which describes a utopian city
     where people live in harmony with nature.
4.   His garden cities were planned, contained communities surrounded by a
     green belt (parks),
5.   Containing proportionate areas of residences, industry, and agriculture.
6.   The Garden City movement aimed at addressing the urban problems from the
     industrial city of that time.
7.   The Garden City Concept was an effective response for a better quality of
     life in overcrowded and dirty industrial towns which had deteriorated the
     environment and posed a serious threat to health.
What was the problem?
• The growth of the industrial cities of Victoria was a
  problem for England.
• Industrialization has attracted a large number of
  people to cities, promising better wages, more fun
  and more opportunities for social activities.
It did, However, cause:
• Overcrowing due to migration
• Rent and prices have risen high
• Housing has become insufficient to support all
  people
• Lack of adequate water supplies
• Poor sewage systems
• Poverty
• Poor living conditions leading to disease such as
  typhold, cholera.
What is the garden city movement
The garden city pioneered the use of green belts
that have served many purposes including
maintaining agriculture and rural life,
    • Preserving nature and culture,
    • Recreation,
    • Reducing pollution,
    • Controlling development.
• Howard's vision for garden cities was a
  response to the need to improve the quality of
  urban life because city life has changed since
  the Industrial Revolution due to overcrowding
  due to uncontrolled growth.
• The Garden City introduced the use of green
  belts that have served many uses, including
  conservation of agricultural and rural life,
  conservation of nature and heritage,
  recreation, minimization of pollution and
  management of growth.
Main components of Howard's Garden City movement
• Planned Dispersal: The organized outward migration of industries and people to towns of
  sufficient size to provide the services, variety of occupations, and level of culture needed by
  a balanced cross-section of modern society.
• Limit of Town - size: The growth of towns to be limited, so that their inhabitants may live
  near work, shops, social centers, and each other and also near open country.
• Amenities: The internal texture of towns to be open enough to permit of houses with private
  gardens, adequate space for schools and other functional purposes, and pleasant parks and
  parkways.
• Town and Country Relationship: The town area to be defined and a large area around it
  reserved permanently for agriculture; thus enabling the farm people to be assured of a
  nearby market and cultural center, and the town people to have the benefit of a country
  situation.
• Planning Control: Pre-planning of the whole town framework, including the road - scheme,
  and functional zoning; the fixing of maximum densities; the control of building as to quality
  and design, but allowing for individual variety; skillful planting and landscape garden
  design.
• Neighborhoods: The town to be divided into wards, each to some extent a developmental
  and social entity
Principles of the Garden City
movement,
1. Strong vision, leadership, and community
   engagement
2. Land value capture for the benefit of the
   community
3. Housing types that are affordable for
   ordinary people
4. Strong local jobs that are easily reached in
   the Garden City by distance
5. Opportunities for residents to grow their
   own food, including needs.
6. Well-connected and biodiversity-rich
   public parks, high-quality gardens, tree-
   lined roads, and open spaces to avoid
   unplanned expansion.
7. Integrated and accessible transport
   systems.
TOWN
• The 'City Magnet' draw is the career and high wage prospects, social
  opportunities, amusements, and well-illuminated highways. Country
  Magnet's pull is in natural beauty, fresh air, healthy. It was shutting
  out of sight, providing crowd solitude and remoteness from life. But
  it came at the expense of foul air, expensive drainage, murky sky and
  slums.
COUNTRY
• Natural beauty, low rents, fresh air, meadow but low wages and lack
  of drainage were offered. Country has sluggishness, lack of society,
  low wages, lack of entertainment and general decay.
TOWN- COUNTRY
• It was a combination of town and countryside to provide both
  advantages and
• The beauty of nature, social opportunities, areas where easy access,
  low rent, high wages and a business area.
• Therefore, the solution was found in a synthesis of Town and
  Country's advantages - the ' Town - Country Mix' - a Town in the
  Country was suggested, with the benefits of natural beauty, fresh air
  and healthiness within it. The advantages of the Town - Country are
  thus the seed to be free from either of the disadvantages.
3. CENTRAL PLACE THEORY
         The German
                                             The primary purpose of a
     geographer WalterWalter Christaller
                                           settlement or market town is    Such towns are centrally
  Christaller introduced the
 Walter Christaller
                                            the provision of goods and    located and may be called
  central-place theory in his
                                           services for the surrounding         central places.
book entitled Central Places
                                                   market area.
in Southern Germany (1933).
                                           Lower-order central places
  Settlements that provide
                                            have small market areas         Higher-order places are
  more goods and services
                                             and provide goods and        more widely distributed and
  than do other places are
                                           services that are purchased    fewer in number than lower-
 called higher-order central
                                           more frequently than higher-           order places.
           places.
                                            order goods and services.
    • People gather together in cities to share goods,
                   services, and ideas
        • Cities exist for purely economic reasons
• Central Place is a settlement which provides one or more
  services for the population living around it
• Central goods and services – these are provided ONLY
  in the central place, things such as professional sports
  teams, international airports, etc.
• Threshold – The minimum number of people required to
  justify a certain good/service
• Range – The Maximum distance a consumer will travel
  for a good/service
• Complementary regions – the area surrounding a central
  place that relies exclusively on that central place because
  it is the only location within the range of sale.
• The theory states that central goods and services are
  located in a central place.
• The central place is surrounded by a complementary
  region where essentially all residents are dependent upon
  the central place for central goods and services.
4. LE CORBUSIER
1. Charles-Édouard Jeanneret, who
   chose to be known as Le
   Corbusier (1965), was a Swiss
   architect,   designer, urbanist,
   writer, and painter
2. Famous for being one of the
   pioneers of what now is called
   Modern architecture or the
   International style.
3. His career spanned five decades,
   with his buildings constructed
   throughout    central    Europe,
   India, Russia, and one each in
   North and South America.
1. He was a pioneer in studies of modern high design
   and was dedicated to providing better living
   conditions for the residents of crowded cities.
2. For several years French officials had been
   unsuccessful in dealing with the squalor of the
   growing Parisian slums
3. Le Corbusier sought efficient ways to house large
   numbers of people in response to the urban
   housing crisis.
4. He believed that his new, modern architectural
   forms would provide a new organizational solution
   that would raise the quality of life for the lower
   classes.
1. Called for large blocks of cell-like
   individual apartments stacked one on top
   of the other, with plans that included a
   living room, bedrooms, and kitchen, as
   well as a garden terrace.
2. Not merely content with designs for a few
   housing blocks, soon Le Corbusier moved
   into studies for entire cities.
3. In 1922, he presented his scheme for a
   "Contemporary City" for three million
   inhabitants.
4. The centerpiece of this plan was the
   group      of     sixty-story,  cruciform
   skyscrapers; steel-framed office buildings
   encased in huge curtain walls of glass.
• These skyscrapers were set within large, rectangular
  park-like green spaces.
• At the center was a huge transportation hub, that on
  different levels included depots for buses and trains, as
  well as highway intersections, and at the top, an airport.
• He had the fanciful notion that commercial airliners
  would land between the huge skyscrapers.
• He segregated pedestrian circulation paths from the
  roadways and glorified the use of the automobile as a
  means of transportation.
• Zigzag apartment blocks (set far back from the street
  amid green space), housed the inhabitants.
5. Radburn
• Radburn Theory is a concept in urban planning and
  design that was first proposed by Clarence Stein and
  Henry Wright in the 1920s.
• The design of the Radburn neighborhood model
  was, in essence, a hierarchical one comprising four
  levels-enclave, block, superblock, and
  neighborhood.
• The fundamental component was an enclave of
  twenty or so houses.
• These houses were arrayed in a U-formation about a
  short vehicular street called a lane,
• A cul-de-sac court with access to individual garages.
While the back of each house faced this court the front of the
house had a garden.
Three or more of these enclaves were lined together to form a
block.
Enclaves within the block were separated from one another by
a pedestrian pathway that ran between the front gardens of all
the houses.
The blocks, usually four in number, were arranged around the
sides of a central parkway in such a manner to enclose the
open green space.
  DESIGN
 ELEMENTS
 • SEPARATION of pedestrian and vehicular
    traffic
 • SUPER BLOCK ‐ large block surrounded by
    main roads
• houses grouped around small CUL DE
   SACS ‐ each accessed from main road,
   Living, Bedroom faced gardens & parks,
   service areas to ACCESS ROADS
• Remaining land ‐ PARK AREAS
 • WALKWAYS           ‐    designed     such
    that      pedestrians      can     reach
    social     places     without   crossing
    automobile street
END