History of the Built Environment in the US
2018. UCLA URBL PL 281 - Graduate Seminar
University of California in Los Angeles (UCLA)
Department of Urban Planning, Luskin School of Public Affairs
Course Description
This course historicizes typologies and urban fragments from the American built environment to examine the material and immaterial stories behind particular urban forms. The course seeks to unpack the forces behind the making of these different built spaces to better understand how culture, finance, politics, law and design coalesce to create the environment in which we live. As we propose a reading of the built environment as the solidification of culture, politics and design positions into material spaces, this course explores how a range of actors, both humans and things, shape the very territory that in turn reshapes us.
Typologies Explored
Jails
Company Towns
Chinatowns
Heterotopias
Campuses
Retirement Villages
Cemeteries
Movie Studios
Arts Districts
Western Towns
Native American Settlements
Garden Cities
Suburbs
Trailer Parks
Modern Cities
Roads, Tracks & Highways
Public Housing
Urban Renewal
Civic Districts