Document Type

Panel Discussion

Loading...

Media is loading
 

Publication Date

12-2-2019

Comments

In this video, panelists responded to audience questions. There is the continuation of reflection by an audience member on the lack of engagement of the city of New London with the public on these projects that led to this question: (C) Was it participatory in Boston? (00:00-04:42) (D) Raises the issue that we need to shift money from the suburbs to help support small cities. Do you have any idea how to do that? (04:42-12:41)

Overview: Like many American cities, New London was dramatically transformed through a series of redevelopment campaigns from the 1940s to the 1970s. A panel discussion at Connecticut College addresses events in New London in the broader context of midcentury urban planning in New England and across the country, the complex consequences and legacies of urban renewal, and the challenges that face planning today.

Featured speakers:

Lizabeth Cohen, Howard Mumford Jones Professor of American Studies at Harvard University and author of Saving America’s Cities: Ed Logue and the Struggle to Renew Urban America in the Suburban Age (Farrar, Strauss and Giroux: 2019);

Philip Michalowski, former planning consultant and City Development Administrator, City of New London, CT;

James Butler, AICP, Executive Director, Southeastern CT Council of Governments;

Moderated by Anna Vallye, Assistant Professor of Art History and Architectural Studies, Connecticut College.

Please note: Sybil Tetteh, City Planner of New London, originally scheduled to be part of the panel, was unable to participate due to unforeseen circumstances.

Held Monday, December 2. 5:00pm-7:00pm. Charles Chu Room, Shain Library, Connecticut College.

This event is part of Mapping Urban Renewal in New London: http://bit.ly/ccurbanrenewal

Sponsored by the Council of Independent Colleges with Andrew W. Mellon Foundation, and Friends of the Library.

Abstract

In this video, panelists responded to audience questions. There is the continuation of reflection by an audience member on the lack of engagement of the city of New London with the public on these projects that led to this question: (C) Was it participatory in Boston? (00:00-04:42) (D) Raises the issue that we need to shift money from the suburbs to help support small cities. Do you have any idea how to do that? (04:42-12:41)

Share

COinS
 

The views expressed in this paper are solely those of the author.