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The Planning Technician as Urban Visionary: Frederick Bigger and American Planning, 1881-1963University of Southen Maine
University of Pittsburgh This article explores Frederick Biggers importance to the professionalization of American city planning and to the shaping of Pittsburghs urban landscape. Educated as an architect at the University of Pennsylvania and a classmate of Henry Wrights, Bigger dedicated most of his life to establishing urban planning as a discipline in his birth-place, Pittsburgh. However, as a planning theorist as well as a practitioner, Biggers world embraced more than planning administration in the Steel City. He was a founding member of the Regional Planning Association of America who combined a keen knowledge of planning administration with a fervent belief in community planning to serve effectively as an official of the New Deals Greenbelt Town program and a consultant for the Federal Housing Program. Frederick Biggers life highlights the danger of too narrowly pigeonholing pre-World War II planners as moles or skylarks.
Key Words: Frederick Bigger city planning Pittsburgh planning planning history regional planning
Journal of Planning History, Vol. 1, No. 2,
124-153 (2002) |
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