A richly illustrated look at the lives and collaborations of two
unsung giants of American landscape and urban design Gilmore D. Clarke
and Michael Rapuano were the foremost spatial designers of the
American century. Their vast portfolio of public landscapes propelled
the legacy of Frederick Law Olmsted and Calvert Vaux into the motor
age, touching the lives of millions and changing the face of the
nation. Designing the American Century recovers the forgotten legacy
of Clarke and Rapuano, whose parks and parkways, highways and housing
estates helped modernize—for better or worse—the American
metropolis. With the patronage of public-works titan Robert Moses,
Clarke and Rapuano transformed New York over a span of fifty years,
revitalizing the city’s immense park system but also planning
expressways, public housing, and urban renewal projects that laid
waste to entire sections of the city. In this groundbreaking work,
Thomas J. Campanella describes how Clarke and Rapuano helped create
some of the metropolitan region’s most iconic landscapes, from the
Central Park Zoo and Conservatory Garden to the Henry Hudson Parkway
and Riverside Park, Jones Beach, the Palisades and Taconic State
Parkways, and the Brooklyn Heights Promenade. He shows how they left
their mark far beyond Gotham as well, with projects as diverse as
Yellowstone’s Mammoth Hot Springs, the Mount Vernon Memorial
Highway, site plans for the Pentagon and CIA headquarters, and
Montreal’s Olympic Park. Richly illustrated with a wealth of
previously unpublished drawings, plans, and photographs, Designing the
American Century fills one of the last major gaps in the history of
American urbanism.
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The Public Landscapes of Clarke and Rapuano, 1915–1965
Produktdetaljer
ISBN
9780691267128
Publisert
2025
Utgiver
Princeton University Press
Språk
Product language
Engelsk
Format
Product format
Digital bok
Forfatter