Planning NEDA 3 Nja
Planning NEDA 3 Nja
Planning NEDA 3 Nja
HISTORY,
EVOLUTION AND
APPROACHES
Context of and
rationale for planning
over time follow the
history of cities where
they were derived…
ENVIRONMENTAL PLANNING,
also known as urban and regional planning, city
planning, town and country planning, and/or
human settlements planning, refers to the
multi-disciplinary art and science
of analyzing, specifying, clarifying, harmonizing,
managing and regulating the use and
development of land an water resources, in
relation to their environs, for the development
of sustainable communities and ecosystems.
– RA 10587
An environmental planner
refers to a person who registered
and licensed to practice
environmental planning and who
holds a valid Certificate of
Registration and a valid
Professional Identification Card
from the Board of Environmental
Planning and the Professional
Regulation Commission. – RA
10587
• One who creates and recommends
on land use and other planning
fields
• An advisor and regulator to the
government, private sector, and the
communities
• An urban designer
• Someone who looks far into the
future for the welfare of a place
• A capacity builder, facilitator, and
educator
• An advocate of causes
TIMELINE OF HUMAN SETTLEMENTS
(AS GUIDE IN UNDERSTANDING THE EVOLUTION OF PLANNING APPROACHES)
“if anyone intentionally pollutes the water of another, whether the water
of a spring, or collected in reservoirs, either by poisonous substances, or
by digging, or by theft, let the injured party bring the cause before the
wardens of the city, and claim in writing the value of the loss; if the
accused be found guilty of injuring the water by deleterious substances,
let him not only pay damages, but purify the stream or the cistern which
contains the water, in such manner as the laws… or der the purification
to be made by the offender in each case.”
THE ENVIRONMENTAL CODE (PD 1152)
753 BC
Rome conquered Italy in 265 BC and ruled up to
14 AD and the lands around Mediterranean
For many years, Rome ruled a great empire
(including Egypt and Greece)
Fortified cities – Rome, Jerusalem, Ephesus, Massilia,
Lutetia, London
FALL OF THE ROMAN EMPIRE (393 AD)
Started in London
Inventions in textiles or in iron-making (developed between
1700 and 1780) dispersed industries out of the existing
towns and into open countryside
Cities in Europe continued to grow after the middle ages.
The appearances of cities slowly began to change as new
methods of building construction and warfare were
invented.
Technological improvements in stone construction made
possible Gothic cathedral structures
Invention of portland cements, carbon steel and
electric elevator paved the construction of high-
rise buildings
Importation of gunpowder (from China) made city
walls impractical, obsolete and no longer useful
1700, industrial revolution began in England and it
quickly spread to other countries (the locomotive)
Limitations of cities became apparent
SIGNIFICANT SHIFT IN DEVELOPMENT
COAL:
Principal raw material of industry
Industries concentrated in areas where coal was
abundant
Most influential
Wrote the book: Garden Cities of Tomorrow (first
published in 1898 under the title Tomorrow, and
republished in 1902)
Conceptualized the so-called garden city (or in modern
parlance, new town) movement
Not a professional planner; a shorthand writer in the law
courts but a private individual who liked to speculate,
write and organize
SIR EBENEZER HOWARD
(1850-1928)
It was also during this time that Unwin was commissioned to
prepare an advisory plan for London and its region, taking off
from Howard’s idea of large-scale decentralization of people
and jobs. Thus, the idea of satellite towns came about.
PATRICK GEDDES (1854-1932)
PATRICK ABERCROMBIE (1879-1957)
Patrick Abercrombie weld the complex ideas from Howard
through Geddes to Unwin and turn them into a graphic
blueprint for the future development of a great region
Region – centered on the metropolis but extending for 30
miles (50 kms) around it in every direction and
encompassing over 10 million people
Applied the method of Geddes – the SAP, in a very cartoon-
like clarity!
FRANK LLOYD WRIGHT (1869-1959)
government intervention
architecture in large scale
concerned with man and environment
the art and science of ordering the use of the land and the
character and siting of buildings and communication routes so
as to secure the maximum practicable degeree of autonomy,
convenience, and beauty. (Lewis Keebles)
a control and guidance system
PLANNING IS…
A universal human activity, a basic survival skill involving the
consideration of outcomes before choosing among
alternatives.
A deliberate, organized and continuous process of
identifying different elements and aspects of the
environment (social, economic, physical, political),
determining their present state and interaction, projecting
them in concert throughout a period of time in the future,
and formulating and programming a set of actions and plans
to attain desired results.
PLANNING IS…