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Presentation
Post War Destruction and Construction in the U.S.: Shaping a New Landscape and Way of Life
EDRA42 Chicago: Make No Little Plans: Proceedings of the 42nd Annual Conference of the Environmental Design Research Association
  • Joseph Juhasz, University of Colorado
  • Robert Flanagan, University of Colorado
  • Karen Franck, New Jersey Institute of Technology
  • Te-Sheng Huang, New Jersey Institute of Technology
  • Lynn Paxson, Iowa State University
Document Type
Abstract
Disciplines
Publication Version
Published Version
Publication Date
1-1-2011
Conference Title
42nd Annual Conference of the Environmental Design Research Association
Conference Date
May 25–28, 2011
Geolocation
(41.8781136, -87.62979819999998)
Abstract

After World War II, the U.S. embarked on a massive building initiative, creating housing where little or none had existed before outside of cities and tearing down existing housing in cites to replace it with new housing and commercial and cultural centers. Without the destruction of entire sections of cities wrought by the war in Europe, we created our own forms of destruction and (re)construction, significantly changing the landscape and, for many, the way of life.

Comments

This abstract is from EDRA42 Chicago: Proceedings of the 42nd Annual Conference of the Environmental Design Research Association, ed. Daniel Mittleman and Deborah A. Middleton (McLean, VA: Environmental Design Research Association, 2011). Posted with permission.

Copyright Owner
Environmental Design Research Association
Language
en
File Format
application/pdf
Citation Information
Joseph Juhasz, Robert Flanagan, Karen Franck, Te-Sheng Huang, et al.. "Post War Destruction and Construction in the U.S.: Shaping a New Landscape and Way of Life" Chicago, IL, United StatesEDRA42 Chicago: Make No Little Plans: Proceedings of the 42nd Annual Conference of the Environmental Design Research Association (2011) p. 298 - 300
Available at: http://works.bepress.com/lynn_paxson/2/