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Designing San Francisco: Art, Land, and Urban Renewal in the City by the Bay

✍ Scribed by Alison Isenberg


Publisher
Princeton University Press
Year
2017
Tongue
English
Leaves
437
Category
Library

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✦ Synopsis


A major new urban history of the design and development of postwar San Francisco

Designing San Francisco is the untold story of the formative postwar decades when U.S. cities took their modern shape amid clashing visions of the future. In this pathbreaking and richly illustrated book, Alison Isenberg shifts the focus from architects and city planners—those most often hailed in histories of urban development and design—to the unsung artists, activists, and others who played pivotal roles in rebuilding San Francisco between the 1940s and the 1970s.

Previous accounts of midcentury urban renewal have focused on the opposing terms set down by Robert Moses and Jane Jacobs—put simply, development versus preservation—and have followed New York City models. Now Isenberg turns our attention west to colorful, pioneering, and contentious San Francisco, where unexpectedly fierce battles were waged over iconic private and public projects like Ghirardelli Square, Golden Gateway, and the Transamerica Pyramid.

When large-scale redevelopment came to low-rise San Francisco in the 1950s, the resulting rivalries and conflicts sparked the proliferation of numerous allied arts fields and their professionals, including architectural model makers, real estate publicists, graphic designers, photographers, property managers, builders, sculptors, public-interest lawyers, alternative press writers, and preservationists. Isenberg explores how these centrally engaged arts professionals brought new ideas to city, regional, and national planning and shaped novel projects across urban, suburban, and rural borders. San Francisco’s rebuilding galvanized far-reaching critiques of the inequitable competition for scarce urban land, and propelled debates over responsible public land stewardship. Isenberg challenges many truisms of this renewal era—especially the presumed male domination of postwar urban design, showing how women collaborated in city building long before feminism’s impact in the 1970s.

An evocative portrait of one of the world’s great cities, Designing San Francisco provides a new paradigm for understanding past and present struggles to define the urban future.

✦ Table of Contents


Cover......Page 1
Title......Page 4
Copyright......Page 5
Contents......Page 6
Introduction Land and Landscape......Page 8
1 The Illustrated Pitch “Guys with Ideas” and the 1940s Vision for a Historic Waterfront District......Page 27
2 “Not Bound by an Instinct to Preserve” The Modernist Turn toward History......Page 63
3 “Culture-a-Go-Go” The Mermaid Sculpture Controversy and the Liberation of Civic Design......Page 87
4 Married Merchant-Builders From Home-Making to City Planning in the Postwar Suburban Boom......Page 115
5 Managing Property An “Iffy” Collaboration......Page 143
6 Movers and Shakers Publicists and the Writing of Real Estate......Page 169
7 “Urban Renewal with Paint” Graphic Design and the City......Page 197
8 Model Cities “Think Big, Build Small”......Page 231
9 “The Competition for Urban Land” Grady Clay’s Lost 1962 Manuscript......Page 277
10 Skyscrapers, Street Vacations, and the Seventies......Page 301
Conclusion “Got Land Problems?”......Page 345
Acknowledgments......Page 367
Abbreviations......Page 371
Notes......Page 372
List of Archives Consulted......Page 420
List of Interviews by the Author......Page 421
Index......Page 422
Image Credits......Page 434


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