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PLAN 704 - Planning Theory  

This is the course page for PLAN 704, Planning Theory, for the Fall semester, 2012.
Last Updated: Apr 10, 2013 URL: http://guides.lib.unc.edu/content.php?pid=367431 Print Guide Email AlertsShareThis
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Philip McDaniel
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Citing

Citing Information Tutorial (UNC Libraries)

Chicago Manual of Style

There are several copies available throughout the University Libraries, including at the Davis Reference Desk

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The Bluebook: A Uniform System of Citation

In addition to the Chicago Manual of Style, the Bluebook will be helpful for specific instruction and examples of how to cite:

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Recommended Books

A selection of books that provide insight into notable planning theories.

Searching for Books

Suggested Subject Headings

 Tip: try searching in the catalog for a specific city name combined with your topic: for example, city planning raleigh will find all results with city planning -- north carolina -- raleigh in the subject headings, and the most relevant materials related to planning in the city of Raleigh, NC.

Classic Plans - Chicago 1909

International Plans

  • Ciudad Guayana, 1960s
    Located in Venezuela, "one of the leading examples in the world of a city planned in accordance with the principles of comprehensive rational planning."
  • Delhi Master Plans 1962
    Updates to this plan are available here.
  • World Habitat Awards
    Two awards are given annually to projects that provide practical and innovative solutions to current housing needs and problems, from the global South as well as the North.
 

Films & Videos

More Video Clips

Crisis in Levittown, PA

San Francisco, 1906 - days before the 1906 earthquake

Barcelona, 1908

London, 1927

Los Angeles, 1990s - time-lapse of freeway traffic

Streaming Films

Paris in the 19th Century: The Making of a Modern City (58 minutes)
This program thoroughly maps out the transformation of Paris during the 19th century from a stifling, congested city of narrow and winding streets to an aesthetically pleasing model of Industrial Age modernity.

Suburbs: Arcadia for Everyone (58 minutes)
This film covers the many forms suburbia has taken, like the first planned suburban development in Llewellyn Park, N.J.; detached dwellings in sylvan surroundings, with restrictive land use and minimum cost regulations (Olmstead and Vauz' Riverside); the company town, whose prototype is Pullman, IL.; a suburb like Forest Hills successfully inserted into the very heart of New York; and Levittown, PA, which addressed the problem of affordable individual housing for large masses and their automobiles.

New York: The City and the World (1945-Present) (141 minutes)
Episode 7 from the landmark PBS documentary film series on New York City devotes a whole hour to the battle between Robert Moses and Jane Jacobs.

Chicago: City of the Century (87 minutes)
Part 1 (Mud Hole to Metropolis) from the American Experience series on PBS covers the explosive growth of one of the world's most vibrant cities.

e2: Design, Season 1 (27 minutes each)
An ongoing PBS series about the pioneers and innovators in the field of sustainable architecture. Each episode examines the built environment's effects — both ecological, and social — and the design innovations that can reduce buildings' contribution to climate change.
Episodes: 1-The Green Apple (NYC) | 2-Green for All | 3-The Green Machine (Chicago) | 4-Gray to Green (Boston's Big Dig) | 5-China: From Red to Green | 6-Deeper Shades of Green

Films on Video (available for viewing at the MRC)

Brick by Brick: A Civil Rights Story
The film uses the bitter struggle over equal housing rights in Yonkers, New York during the 1980s to show the 'massive resistance' the Civil Rights movement confronted when it moved North.

Holding Ground: The Rebirth of Dudley Street — DVD | VHS
Through the voices of committed residents, activists and city officials, this award-winning documentary shows how a Boston community organized the Dudley Street Neighborhood Initiative and was able to create and carry out its own agenda for change.

Roger & Me
Michael Moore's first film documenting his efforts to meet General Motors chairman Roger Smith and to get Smith to visit Flint, Michigan to confront the effects of deindustrialization on Moore's hometown.

Flag Wars
Examines the results of gentrification in Columbus, Ohio, when African American inner-city residents are met with an influx of white gay home buyers (and it even includes a zoning meeting!).

China Blue
"China Blue, which was made without permission from the Chinese authorities, offers an alarming report on the economic pressures applied by Western companies and the resulting human consequences, as the real profits are made–and kept–in first-world countries. The unexpected ending makes the connection between the exploited workers and U.S. consumers even clearer." (from the PBS webpage for the film)

Taken For a Ride
Documentary which examines the emergence of the country's automobile culture and its antecedents by looking at the dynamics of how rail lines were made to appear as burdensome and obsolete.

Q2P
Q2P is a film about toilets and the city-- about gender, class, caste and most of all about space, urban development and the twisted myth of the global metropolis.

Chavez Ravine
This documentary captures how a community was betrayed by greed, political hypocrisy, and good intentions gone astray. Don Normark's haunting photographs evoke a lost Mexican-American village in the heart of downtown LA, razed in the 1950's to build an enormous low-income housing project. Instead, the federally purchased land was used for Dodger Stadium.

Garbage Warrior
Using empty beer cans, old tires, plastic bottles and other garbage, iconoclastic architect Michael Reynolds, based in New Mexico, has been building ecologically sustainable structures for 35 years. Calling his structures "earthships," Reynolds has had conflicts with government officials over inflexible zoning and housing laws, but his architectural ideas were put to use in the Andaman Islands following the 2005 tsunami.

The Garden
"The fourteen–acre community garden at 41st and Alameda in South Central Los Angeles is the largest of its kind in the United States. Started as a form of healing after the devastating L.A. riots in 1992, the South Central Farmers have since created a miracle in one of the country's most blighted neighborhoods. Growing their own food. Feeding their families. Creating a community. But now, bulldozers are poised to level their 14–acre oasis."

Bus Riders Union
Documentary film on the Bus Riders Union (BRU), a grassroots organization whose multilingual membership is drawn from the predominantly low–income, African–American, Latino and Asian mass transit ridership of Los Angeles County. Not readily available for viewing, but there are clips on the Strategy Center's website, and YouTube.

Film & Vid

  • Crisis in Levittown, PA  
      
  • San Francisco, 1906  
      
  • Barcelona, 1908  
      
  • London, 1927  
      
  • Los Angeles, 1990s  
      
  • Paris in the 19th Century: The Making of a Modern City  
      
    This program thoroughly maps out the transformation of Paris during the 19th century from a stifling, congested city of narrow and winding streets to an aesthetically pleasing model of Industrial Age modernity.
  • Suburbs: Arcadia for Everyone  
      
    This film covers the many forms suburbia has taken, like the first planned suburban development in Llewellyn Park, N.J.; detached dwellings in sylvan surroundings, with restrictive land use and minimum cost regulations (Olmstead and Vauz' Riverside); the company town, whose prototype is Pullman, IL.; a suburb like Forest Hills successfully inserted into the very heart of New York; and Levittown, PA, which addressed the problem of affordable individual housing for large masses and their automobiles.
  • New York: The City and the World (1945-Present)  
      
    Episode 7 from the landmark PBS documentary film series on New York City devotes a whole hour to the battle between Robert Moses and Jane Jacobs.
  • Chicago: City of the Century  
      
    Part 1 (Mud Hole to Metropolis) from the American Experience series on PBS covers the explosive growth of one of the world's most vibrant cities.
  • e2: Design, Season 1  
      
    An ongoing PBS series about the pioneers and innovators in the field of sustainable architecture. Each episode examines the built environment's effects — both ecological, and social — and the design innovations that can reduce buildings' contribution to climate change.
    Episodes: 1-The Green Apple (NYC) | 2-Green for All | 3-The Green Machine (Chicago) | 4-Gray to Green (Boston's Big Dig) | 5-China: From Red to Green | 6-Deeper Shades of Green
  • Brick by Brick: A Civil Rights Story  
      
    The film uses the bitter struggle over equal housing rights in Yonkers, New York during the 1980s to show the 'massive resistance' the Civil Rights movement confronted when it moved North.
  • Holding Ground: The Rebirth of Dudley Street  
      
    Through the voices of committed residents, activists and city officials, this award-winning documentary shows how a Boston community organized the Dudley Street Neighborhood Initiative and was able to create and carry out its own agenda for change. DVD | VHS

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