Up - Sir Patrick Geddes
Up - Sir Patrick Geddes
Up - Sir Patrick Geddes
GROUP MEMBERS
➔ Patrick Geddes, who was highly influenced by earlier theorists such as Herbert
Spencer and Frederic Le Play, expanded upon earlier theoretical developments
that lead to the concept of regional planning.
➔ Thus both place & folk are linked and through work
are in constant transition.
INFLUENCE OF GEDESSIAN TRAID:
➔ Geddes advocated the civic survey as indispensable to urban planning: his motto was
"diagnosis before treatment".
➔ Such a survey should include, at a minimum, The geology, the geography, the climate, the
economic life, and the social institutions of the city and region.
➔ His early work surveying the city of Edinburgh became a model for later surveys.
➔ He was particularly critical of that form of planning which relied overmuch on design and
effect, neglecting to consider "the surrounding quarter and constructed without reference to
local needs or potentialities".
➔ Geddes encouraged instead exploration and consideration of the "whole set of existing
conditions", studying the "place as it stands, seeking out how it has grown to be what it is, and
recognizing alike its advantages, its difficulties and its defects".
Local survey &
Understanding of
the Culture and the
context was the
primary step
towards creating
the town plan.
➔ Geddes points out how the geographical features , the contour and relief are associated with
primitive occupations of man.
➔ In 1909, Geddes planned the Zoological Gardens in Edinburgh, which led to his development of a
regional planning model called the Valley Section. This model illustrated the complex interaction
among bio-geomorphology, natural occupations such as a hunter, miner, or fisher that are
supported by physical geographies that in turn determine patterns of human settlement .
➔ The point of this model was to understand processes by which relationship between humans and
then environment could be improved through regional planning.
➔ Accordingly the miner, the woodman and hunter on the heights, the shepherd on the grassy
slopes, the poor peasant on the lower slopes, the rich peasant on the plain and finally the
fisherman at sea coast are not only controlled geographically, but are also conditioned by their
environment and occupation which is manifested in their settlements.
➔ “ Geddes says the violation of this principle will not only result in daily economic waste but also
end in aesthetic ruin”.
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