000 02091cam a22002537i 4500
001 124374
005 20230410143141.0
008 130117s2013 ilua b 001 0 eng
020 _a9781611900804 (paperback)
040 _aDLC
_beng
_cDLC
_erda
_dDLC
042 _apcc
043 _an-us-il
050 1 4 _abH939p 2013
100 1 _aHunt, D. Bradford,
_d1968-
245 1 0 _aPLANNING CHICAGO /
_cD. Bradford Hunt and Jon B. DeVries, AICP.
264 1 _aChicago :
_bAmerican Planning Association, Planners Press,
_c[2013]
300 _avii, 342 p. :
_bcolor ill. ;
_c22 cm
490 0 _aPlanning
504 _aIncludes bibliographical references (pages 294-325) and index.
505 _a1. Introduction 2. Chicago's Planning Context Part I: CHICAGO'S CENTRAL AREA 3. The Origins of Chicago's Post-Industrial City: Planning Change in 1955-1958 4. The High-water Mark of City-led Planning: The 1966 Comprehensive Plan 5. Growth Coalition Takes the Lead for Planning 6. Chicago's Equity Planning Moment 7. Planning in the Void: Redevelopment in the North Loop and Near South Part II: NEIGHBORHOOD CHANGE AND PLANNING RESPONSE 8. Chicago and Community Planning Innovation 9. Englewood 10. Uptown 11. Little Village 12. Remaking Public Housing: The Chicago Housing Authority's Plan for Transformation Part III: INDUSTRIAL POLICY IN CHICAGO: CITY PLANNING FOR INDUSTRIAL RETENTION AND GROWTH 13. Defending the Industrial Base: Sector and District Strategies 14. Has it Worked? A Changing Employment Scene 15. The Calumet District: Planning for Brownfields 16. Planning for Global Freight in the Chicago Region Part IV: CHICAGO IN CURRENT ERA 17. The Tourist City: Navy Pier, McCormick Place, and Millennium Park 18. The Era of Big Plans Is Over 19. The Lost Decade 20. The Disconnect between Financing and Planning 21. Examples of Positive Middle-Ground Planning 22. Conclusion: Restore Planning to Chicago
650 0 _aCity planning
_zIllinois
_zChicago.
856 4 2 _3Contributor biographical information
_uhttps://www.loc.gov/catdir/enhancements/fy1610/2013930970-b.html
942 _2lcc
_cbk
999 _c96636
_d96636