Available Formats
When Architecture Meets Activism: The Transformative Experience of Hank Williams Village in the Windy City
By (Author) Roger Guy
Bloomsbury Publishing PLC
Lexington Books
22nd November 2016
United States
Professional and Scholarly
Non Fiction
City and town planning: architectural aspects
Urban communities / city life
Political activism / Political engagement
711.40977311
Hardback
284
Width 158mm, Height 239mm, Spine 22mm
531g
This social history and community study documents the events surrounding the attempt by community members, activists, and VISTA architects to resist the planned construction of a community college in the neighborhood of Uptown. The planner and architect are seldom envisioned as advocates for the urban poor. However, during the 1960s, New Left planners and architects began working with marginalized groups in cities to design alternatives to urban renewal projects. This was part of a national advocacy planning movement that was taking shape in urban areas like Chicago. Inspired by critics of the Rational-comprehensive model of planning, advocacy planners opposed the imposition of projects on neighborhoods often with no collaboration from residents. One example of this resistance was Hank Williams Villagea multi-purpose housing and commercial redevelopment project modeled after a southern town. The Village was an attempt to prevent the displacement of thousands of southern whites by the planned construction of a community college in Chicagos Uptown neighborhood. While the plan for the Village failed to win support of the local urban renewal board, the work performed by the young VISTA architects became instrumental in their subsequent career trajectories and thus served as formative personal and professional experience.
University of North Carolina at Pembroke sociologist Roger Guy ably uses Chicagos Uptown as a case study of the emergence of activist architecture and advocacy planning in the mid-20th century.... The authors enthusiasm for the many levels on which this compelling narrative unfolds complements his academic rigor in getting the details right.... This book provides an excellent opportunity for students to understand the history and philosophy of advocacy planning and activist architecture, as well as to absorb useful insights on the benefits and pitfalls involved with these practices.... [T]his work is an important contribution to the literature on the history of urban planning and architectural design. When Architecture Meets Activism articulates the politics, helps understand the people, and analyzes the professions that came together in Uptown during the 1960s and 1970s. It is a compelling narrative well worth the read. * Journal of Urban Affairs *
Guy is at his best when analyzing the complicated lives and motivations of coalition members, primarily male leaders, whose stories are usually hidden in macro studies but are made visible here by his extensive use of interviews. . . . Guy's work challenges the view that access and participation alone equate to influence in decision-making. * Journal of Southern History *
This is an excellent, thoroughly researched and well-written detailed historical account of a group of advocacy planners and architects who, in the 1960s, led the effort to revitalize Chicagos Uptown, a community of poor white migrants from the South. Guys book presents a new perspective on urban renewal by uncovering the grassroots organizing role played by a group of radical architects and planners who led the effort to preserve community control over redevelopment in Uptown. This is a ground breaking study that is well suited for urban history, geography, sociology, and planning courses. -- Joseph A. Rodriguez, University of Wisconsin-Milwaukee
For those concerned with the history of America's sometimes turbulent city centers, Roger Guy's vibrant new book is animportant read. By exploring the life and death of Hank Williams Village in Chicago's Uptown,he describes how, in the final years of the 1960s, architects and planners came together with political activists to create an alliance, a wave of organized resistance to the orthodoxies of centrally planned urban renewal. The story told in When Architecture Meets Activismthat of the unprecedented level of control and self-determination over their builtenvironment sought bylocal residents spurred on by the promises of the civil rights era, and the ultimately successful extinguishing of this community-based approach to designmakes clear the profoundimportance of grassroots decision-making and advocacy planning, and reveals much that can teach us about contemporary urban issues. -- Paul Cronin, School of Visual Arts
The once thriving Uptown neighborhood in Chicago was a cauldron of social change at the end of the 1960s. Roger Guy has written an intriguing book about the struggle by residents to fight the citys urban renewal efforts by proposing their own plan for Hank Williams Village. Through extensive interviews and archival research Guy traces the emergence of advocacy planning, Community Design Centers, and activist architecture from early concepts and theory to application in Uptown. The story of young VISTA Volunteer architects, charismatic leadership among Appalachian migrants living in Uptown, development of a Community Design Center, and the lasting impact on those involved is a must read for anyone interested in urban planning history. -- Thomas E. Wagner, University Professor Emeritus of Planning and Urban Studies, School of Planning, University of Cincinnati
Roger Guy is professor of sociology and criminal justice at University of North Carolina at Pembroke.