|
Heads
of the department
| Frederick
Johnstone Adams |
1947-1957 |
| John
Tasker Howard |
1957-1970 |
| Lloyd
Rodwin |
1970-1974 |
| Langley
C. Keyes |
1974-1978 |
| Lawrence
E. Susskind |
1978-1982 |
| Gary
A. Hack |
1982-1986 |
| Tunney
F. Lee |
1986-1990 |
| Donald
Allen Schon |
1990-1992 |
| Philip
L. Clay |
1990-1992,
associate department head
1992-1994, head |
| Bishwapriya
Sanyal |
1994-2002 |
| Lawrence
J. Vale |
2002- |
The
Department of Urban Studies and Planning began as a division within
the School of Architecture at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology.
Course IV-B (Course IV is Architecture), City Planning, was first
offered in September 1933 and led to the degree of bachelor in architecture.
The object of the new course was to "encourage in the architectural
student a breadth of outlook which will enable him to see city planning
problems in a broad perspective," and to equip him so that he is
"qualified to cooperate intelligently with engineers, landscape
architects, lawyers, economists, and sociologists in the planning
or replanning of urban areas."
The
five-year course was taught from the architect's perspective and
required the student to complete the first three years of the architectural
curriculum or an acceptable equivalent. After a summer course in
surveying, the student engaged in two years of study that was more
specifically related to city planning. The core of the planning
program involved two required classes each semester: a lecture course
on the technical and cultural elements involved in city planning;
and a design class to permit problem solving in the drafting room.
The lecture course brought in well known experts in the field. The
examination of relevant engineering problems and the design of highways
and earthworks were dealt with in courses taught by the Department
of Civil Engineering. The course also had a strong emphasis on socio-economic
aspects of city planning, and in 1934 classes on these topics were
added to the fourth- and fifth-year curriculum. Frederick Johnstone
Adams was solely responsible for city planning subjects in 1933
and for establishing its multidisciplinary character.
In
1935 the Executive Committee of the Institute's Corporation approved
a master's program called the Master in City Planning (MCP) and
courses in city planning design, and research and administration
were approved by the faculty. Harvard University closed its School
of City Planning the following year, and MIT became the only institution
offering a master's degree in city planning in the United States
at that time. In 1937 Adams directed a special two-week summer program
of in-service training for planners.
In
1941 the Department of Architecture offered Course IV-C, City Planning
Practice. The practice course offered two options, one based on
undergraduate preparation in architecture and the other on preparation
in civil engineering. Option 1 led to the master in city planning
degree together with the bachelor of architecture in city planning.
Option 2 led to the degree of master in city planning, together
with the degree of bachelor of science in civil engineering.
The
course was identical to Course IV-B for the first four years. In
the fifth year and the summer of the sixth year the students spent
three periods at a different office of either the Boston City Planning
Board, the Massachusetts State Planning Board, the Division of Metropolitan
Planning, or the New England Regional Planning Commission.
Enrollment
in city planning courses and in the School of Architecture as a
whole declined greatly during World War II. The profession, including
academic and practicing architects and planners, undertook a self-appraisal
of the education, training, and practice of architecture to redefine
the objectives of the profession. An initial response on the part
of the MIT School of Architecture was to alter the architecture
curriculum to include a general background of planning, the fundamentals
of construction and materials, and the economics of the building
industry. In 1942 the practice course was suspended.
Course
IV-B was renamed City and Regional Planning and reduced to a four-year
program with a new curriculum that was no longer parallel to the
program in architecture but included planning courses in the first
year and an office practice course in the summer of the third year.
The following year the School of Architecture became the School
of Architecture and Planning to reflect the growing importance of
the subject to the profession of architecture.
In
February of 1947 Course IV-B became the Department of City and Regional
Planning (DCRP) in the School of Architecture, and Adams became
the first department head. Enrollment in the program more than doubled
the prewar figures; graduate students outnumbered undergraduates
and the demand for planners exceeded the number of students graduating.
Because the field was a relatively new one, the members of the new
department struggled to obtain enough adequately trained personnel
to meet the demand and to maintain high standards of instruction.
The department continued to accept as its primary responsibility
the training of technically qualified practitioners in the field
of city and regional planning and housing rehabilitation.
In
1954 the DCRP undergraduate program was eliminated and the department
became a graduate school, offering only the two-year M.C.P. degree.
Planning courses at the undergraduate level were offered as electives.
The M.C.P. program focused on the study of the large-scale physical
environment and its interaction with society.
By
1955 many of the planning positions obtained by the graduates of
the program required policy decisions of both an economic and an
administrative nature. Students looking for relevant training sought
interdepartmental degrees at the doctoral level. This growing phenomenon,
coupled with an interest on the parts of educational and operating
institutions in planners with more advanced training, led the DCRP
to consider offering a doctoral program within the department. A
committee composed of well-known practicing planners and architects
convened under the chairmanship of Edwin S. Burdell. The Burdell
Committee recommended the establishment at MIT of a multidisciplinary
center for research on urban and regional problems.
In
1958 the M.C.P. program changed its core curriculum to stress the
planning and design aspects of the city as a whole and to decrease
emphasis on the design of small elements such as subdivisions. Also
in 1958 the department first offered a Ph.D. program in city and
regional planning and the Center for Urban and Regional Studies,
as recommended by the Burdell Committee in 1956, was established
under the directorship of Lloyd Rodwin. A parallel center was established
at Harvard and the two were intended to be integrated and interdisciplinary
in their research approaches. The focus of the center's research
was the physical environment of cities and regions, the forces that
shape them, and the interrelations between urbanization and society.
The key areas of interest included the form and the structure of
the city, transportation, technology, controls, the planning process,
the urban landscape, and the physical planning problems of developing
countries. The center greatly enhanced the research potential for
students and faculty of the DCRP.
To
remain current with the technological achievements affecting cities
as well as the environment as a whole, and in order to remain responsive
to the effect of technology on both cities and the environment,
the DCRP continually updated its curriculum. In 1961 a new research
methods course provided training in the application of modern electronic
computing to planning problems. New M.C.P. and Ph.D. curricula offered
during the same period focused on the visual design of cities, regions,
or large city areas, with a view towards the objectives of redevelopment
projects, and larger issues involved in urban renewal. Also in 1961
the high demand for planning education by foreign students from
developing countries caused the department to examine the very different
training such planners would require. In 1966 Course IV-B became
Course XI. By 1967 the heightened interest in urban problems and
urban studies throughout MIT increased both the research and teaching
capacity of this multidisciplinary field. Within the department,
work developed primarily in four directions: city design; planning
for developing areas; urban planning and social policy; and quantitative
methods. The Special Summer Program for in-service planners continued
to be offered.
Also
in 1967 the department initiated the Special Program in Urban and
Regional Studies (SPURS), funded by the
Ford Foundation. The program offered a fellowship for one year of
intensive study to international students, with preference given
to persons from developing countries. The fellowship was aimed at
mature candidates who would shape policy in developing nations and
enhance their capacity to cope with potential development problems.
In
the spring of 1968 the department inaugurated the Laboratory for
Environmental Studies. The lab received financial support from the
MIT Urban Systems Laboratory, the Harvard-MIT Joint Center for Urban
Studies, and grants and contracts from foundations and federal agencies
such as the Economic Administration and the Department of Housing
and Urban Development. The lab's activities fell into four areas
of concern: race and poverty; psychological perception studies;
developing countries; and information systems for urban analysis.
The
name of the department was changed in 1969 to the Department of
Urban Studies and Planning (DUSP) to reflect a shift in focus from
an emphasis on the structure of communities to a broader concern
with issues of urban and regional development, such as needs of
minorities, environmental problems, and social issues.
During
1970 the department secured formal approval and support for small-scale
initiation of a new science baccalaureate (S.B.) in urban studies,
and students and faculty developed several experimental subjects
for the curriculum. With the advent of the S.B., the option of a
five-year S.B.-M.C.P. degree was also offered. To meet the rising
demand for training in urban services and social policy, the DUSP
began to offer courses in the areas of educational planning, health
planning, welfare policy, social program development and evaluation,
poverty law, and strategies for institutional change.
In
1971 DUSP established the Whitney Young Program, under a Rockefeller
Foundation grant, to help minority leaders cope with the social
and economic development of their communities. The principal aim
of the non-degree program was to enable a selected group of local
leaders to spend the equivalent of an academic year at MIT working
with faculty on projects of special importance to them and to their
organizations or communities. The program was directed by Frank
S. Jones, Ford Professor in the Department of Civil Engineering.
An interdepartmental policy committee chaired by Rodwin developed
general guidelines for the program. Melvin King, former director
of the New Urban League of Greater Boston, served as associate director
and lecturer in the department and was responsible for liaison with
the local minority communities and with the visiting committee representing
key minority and other interested figures.
By
1974 shifts in the allocation of federal funding, rising competition
for foundation dollars, and increased pressure from the Institute
to achieve educational efficiency and cost-effectiveness began to
affect the projects and research efforts of DUSP. The department
had expanded continually from the late 1940s in numbers of students,
faculty, and programs it offered, and the financial difficulties
led the DUSP members to reevaluate the teaching and learning of
urban studies. The curriculum was significantly reorganized. The
Analysis of Public Systems group and the Social Policy group were
merged into the Public Policy Analysis group. The department then
had three program groups: Community and Regional Development; Environmental
Design; and Public Policy Analysis.
By
the late 1970s the department's goals included a commitment to urban
revitalization, environmental protection, and efforts to seek social
justice. During this period continued cuts in outside funding coupled
with rising tuition costs and declining job prospects for graduates,
especially in the public sector, caused a reduction in enrollment
and hampered research efforts. DUSP responded by encouraging faculty
to devote more time to sponsored research and initiated new contacts
with the private sector.
In
1984 the MIT faculty voted to approve a Master of Science in Real
Estate Development program subject to a five-year review. The department
also initiated a developing areas optional track in the M.C.P. program.
In the same year the Center for Real Estate Development was founded
at MIT by 64 corporate and individual members throughout the United
States. The objective of the center was to sponsor research programs
on issues relevant to the real estate development and investment
fields, which offered significant research opportunities for the
department. In 1985 the Corporation approved a petition to begin
a master of science degree program in urban studies and planning.
In
1990 Dean John P. de Monchaux of the School of Architecture and
Planning appointed Donald A. Schon as chairman of a committee to
prepare a ten- to fifteen-year plan for the future of the department.
Other members of the committee were Professors Tunney Lee, Philip
Clay, Lawrence Bacow, Joseph Ferreira, Bernard Frieden, Ralph Gakenheimer,
Gary Hack, Langley Keys, Lawrence Susskind, and Judith Tendler.
The department was organized into five research clusters: Land Development
and Design; Environmental Policy and Planning; Poverty and Development
(in the Third World); Employment and Community and Regional Development;
and Planning and Decision Support Systems (with emphasis on Geographic
Information Systems). The non-degree Community Fellows and SPURS
programs continue to operate. The Community Fellows Program was
renamed the MIT Center for Reflective Community Practice in 1999.
Prepared
by the Institute Archives, MIT Libraries
Updated May 2004
|