Urbani izziv Volume 22, No. 2, December 2011
: 77–85
(Articles)
UDK: 711.5:378.4(737.311.2)'19'
doi: 10.5379/urbani-izziv-en-2011-22-02-001
Author
Marco GilIBERTI
Auburn University, College of Architecture, Design and Construction, Landscape Architecture Program, Auburn, Alabama, USA
mzg0014@auburn.edu
Title
The campus in the twentieth century: The urban campus in Chicago from 1890 to 1965
Abstract
After the Civil War, when socio-political reorganisation was urgently needed, American universities contributed to the process of re-establishing the internal equilibrium of power within the nation. Thus an attempt was made to reinforce the political parties and develop regions as politically discrete territorial entities that were relatively manageable. In the twentieth century the effect of this policy of local centralisation at the regional level, in conjunction with the opportunity offered by the need to develop more effective city governance, was translated into the awareness that a major contribution of academia to politics is to help re-establish the parameters of governability for the entire country. With the goal of documenting and exploring some key relations between campus plans and city planning in Chicago, this paper illustrates a number of campus plans and planning strategies in which “the city” can be thought of as a metonym for the entire society. Nexuses between campus and city planning can be revealed from the creation of the campus of the University of Chicago in 1890 to the first half of the 1960s.
Key Words
American cities, American reformism, local supranational conflicts, campus master plans, urban planning strategies