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Inter-Disciplinarity in Urban Design: Erasing Boundaries between Architects and Planners in Urban Design Studios

Sujata Shetty (Department of Geography and Planning University of Toledo 2801 West Bancroft Street Toledo, OH 43560)
Andreas Luescher (Architecture and Environmental Design College of Technology Bowling Green State University Bowling Green, OH 43403-0301)

Open House International

ISSN: 0168-2601

Article publication date: 1 September 2010

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Abstract

Urban design has historically occupied the gap between architecture and planning. Although there have long been calls for the discipline to bridge this gap, urban design has continued to lean more heavily on design than planning. The efforts to revitalize downtown Toledo, a mid-western U.S. town experiencing steep economic decline, present a classic example of the potentially unfortunate results of this approach. Over the past three decades, there have been many attempts to revitalize the city, especially its downtown, by constructing several large public buildings, all within a few blocks of each other, all designed with little attention to each other or to the surrounding public spaces, and with a remarkable lack of civic engagement.

Responding to calls in the literature for inter-disciplinarity in urban design, and to the city's experience with urban design, the authors created a collaborative studio for architects and planners from two neighboring universities with two purposes: first, to establish a collaborative work environment where any design interventions would be firmly rooted in the planning context (i.e., to erase boundaries between architects and planners); second, to draw lessons from this experience for the practice and teaching of urban design.

Despite the difficulties of collaborating, architects and planners benefited from exposure to each other, learning about each other's work, as well as learning to collaborate. The interdisciplinary teams developed richer proposals than the architect-only teams. Finally, critical engagement with the community is essential to shaping downtown development.

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Citation

Shetty, S. and Luescher, A. (2010), "Inter-Disciplinarity in Urban Design: Erasing Boundaries between Architects and Planners in Urban Design Studios", Open House International, Vol. 35 No. 3, pp. 87-97. https://doi.org/10.1108/OHI-03-2010-B0010

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Open House International

Copyright © 2010 Open House International

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