LESSON 10.1 — Evolution of Planning Thought
A. Standard Map
| Topic | Governing Source / Thinker | Exam Focus |
|---|---|---|
| Pre-planning urbanism | Market forces; incremental organic growth | Conditions that created the reform mandate |
| Utopian reformists | Owen (New Lanark/New Harmony); Fourier (Phalanstère); Cabet (Icaria) | Communal ownership logic; voluntary colony model |
| Public health origins | Chadwick — Sanitary Report (1842); Public Health Act 1848 (UK) | Planning as a health intervention, not aesthetic |
| Scientific / rational planning | Geddes — Folk–Place–Work triad; Cities in Evolution (1915) | Triad elements; Conservative Surgery; Conurbation |
| City as evolution cycle | Mumford — The Culture of Cities (1938); six-stage cycle | Correct sequence: Eopolis → Necropolis |
| CIAM and functional city | Le Corbusier; Athens Charter (1933); four functions | Functions; towers-in-park logic; Jacobs critique |
| Post-CIAM revolt | Team X (Smithsons, van Eyck, Bakema) — Doorn Manifesto (1954) | Human associations vs. CIAM functionalism |
| Advocacy and equity planning | Davidoff — Advocacy and Pluralism in Planning (1965); Krumholz — Cleveland Policy Plan | Planning for the powerless |
| Systems planning | Brian McLoughlin — Urban and Regional Planning: A Systems Approach (1969) | City as a system of interacting components |
| Communicative planning | Forester — Planning in the Face of Power (1989); Healey — Collaborative Planning (1997) | Deliberation, stakeholder argumentation, consensus |
| New Urbanism | Duany, Plater-Zyberk, Calthorpe; Charter of New Urbanism (1996) | Walkability, TND, compact blocks — anti-sprawl |
| Smart growth | US-EPA framework (1990s); compact development, transit, infill | Policy response to suburban sprawl |
| Compact city | Jacobs (critique of sprawl); Jenks, Burton, Williams (1996) | High density + mixed use + reduced car dependence |
B. Mechanism in Words
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Market-led growth creates pathological conditions — Pre-industrial and early-industrial cities grew without oversight: speculative land subdivision, back-to-back tenements, open sewers, and no separation of housing from noxious industry. These conditions — not aesthetics — produced the first planning mandate.
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Reformists propose the exit: build new communities — Owen, Fourier, and Cabet argued that the industrial city was unreformable from within. Their response was the intentional colony: a self-contained community with shared ownership, cooperative work, and designed physical environments. Most colonies failed (New Harmony dissolved within two years), but the model seeded the idea that the physical environment shapes social behaviour.
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Public health reframes planning as a technical discipline — Chadwick’s Report on the Sanitary Condition of the Labouring Population of Great Britain (1842) established, through data, that disease rates tracked housing conditions, water supply, and waste disposal. Planning became a matter of engineering and public administration, not social philosophy. The Public Health Act 1848 created the first statutory basis for sanitary intervention in the built environment.
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Geddes introduces the biological-ecological lens — Geddes, trained as a biologist, argued that planners must understand the city as a living organism shaped by the three-way relationship between its people (Folk), their physical environment (Place), and their economic activities (Work). Survey must precede plan: the diagnostic method — survey → analysis → plan — replaced top-down blueprint thinking. His concept of Conservative Surgery proposed minimum intervention sufficient to improve conditions, preserving existing social fabric wherever possible.
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CIAM codifies the functional city — and overreaches — The Athens Charter (1933) reduced urban life to four functions: dwelling, work, recreation, and circulation. Allocating each function to its own zone, connected by high-speed roads, produced modernist towers-in-parkland. The logic was internally coherent but eliminated the mixed, fine-grained urban environments that sustain street life, local commerce, and informal social control. By the 1960s, the critique was fierce: Jane Jacobs (The Death and Life of Great American Cities, 1961) argued that diversity — of building age, land use, block size, and population density — is the generator of urban vitality, not zoning separation.
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Team X and Davidoff break the functionalist consensus — Team X (the younger generation within CIAM, including Alison and Peter Smithson, Aldo van Eyck, and Jaap Bakema) rejected CIAM’s abstraction of the city into zones and functions. Their Doorn Manifesto (1954) insisted that planning must begin with patterns of human association — street, district, city, dwelling. Separately, Paul Davidoff’s advocacy planning (1965) argued that planners should represent the interests of those excluded from official processes — minority communities, the poor — producing plural plans that expose whose interests are served.
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Systems planning, communicative planning, and contemporary paradigms complete the arc — McLoughlin (1969) introduced cybernetics: the city as a system of interacting components in dynamic equilibrium, allowing planners to model feedback and intervention effects. Communicative planning (Forester, Healey) shifted emphasis from technical rationality to communicative rationality — planning as structured argumentation among stakeholders, not expert calculation. New Urbanism, smart growth, and the compact city then translated theory into design codes and policy frameworks directed at reversing the damage of post-war suburban sprawl.
C. Core Concept Explanations
C1. Pre-Planning Urbanism — Market-Led Incremental Growth
Before statutory planning, cities grew through private land transactions, developer decisions, and incremental building. The outcomes in industrial-era cities were well-documented:
| Condition | Mechanism | Urban consequence |
|---|---|---|
| Speculative tenement development | Developers maximised density on cheap land near factories | Back-to-back housing with no light, air, or sanitation |
| No land-use separation | Industrial, commercial, and residential uses intermingled | Noise, pollution, and hazard concentrated in working-class districts |
| No infrastructure obligation | Private developers had no legal duty to provide roads, drains, or water | Cholera, typhoid, and dysentery endemic in densely built areas |
| Unregulated subdivision | Land could be divided and sold without layout approval | Irregular street networks, dead ends, and landlocked parcels |
The consequence was that planning’s first institutional mandate was not aesthetic improvement or spatial efficiency — it was the prevention of preventable death.
Exam Anchor: Pre-planning urbanism = market-led organic growth. The reform mandate arose from public health conditions (cholera, typhoid), not from design ambitions. This is the context for both the utopian colony movement and the sanitary reform movement.
C2. Utopian Reformists — Owen, Fourier, Cabet
The utopian reformists of the early 19th century shared a core hypothesis: that the design of the physical and social environment directly determines the character and wellbeing of its inhabitants. Where they differed from later planners was in their method — rather than reforming the existing city, they proposed withdrawing from it entirely to build new, intentional communities.
| Thinker | Nationality | Concept | Key project | Founding logic |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Robert Owen (1771–1858) | Welsh / British | Industrial cooperative village | New Lanark (Scotland); New Harmony (Indiana, USA, 1825) | Cooperative ownership + profit-sharing + shared education = reformed character |
| Charles Fourier (1772–1837) | French | Phalanstère (Phalanstery) | Theoretical; partially attempted at Guise, France (Familistère) | ~1,620 members in one large building; work rotated; proportional shares |
| Étienne Cabet (1788–1856) | French | Icaria | Multiple colonies in USA (1848 onward) | Abolish private property; all production communal; governance by majority |
Critical distinctions for exam:
– Owen actually built functioning communities (New Lanark succeeded as a factory town; New Harmony failed after ~2 years due to ideological disputes).
– Fourier’s Phalanstère was largely theoretical but influenced cooperative housing. The Familistère at Guise, built by industrialist Godin in 1859, is the closest built approximation.
– Cabet’s Icarian colonies were ideologically the most radical (no private property); they were also the most prone to schism.
– All three failed to scale. Their legacy is conceptual: the idea that the physical environment is a social instrument, and that planned communities can be designed to produce specified social outcomes.
Exam Anchor: Utopian reformists = Owen, Fourier, Cabet. Their common logic: physical design shapes social behaviour. Method: voluntary withdrawal and new community construction. Outcome: most colonies dissolved; legacy is conceptual, not built.
Source: Fishman, R. (1977). Urban Utopias in the Twentieth Century. New York: Basic Books.
C3. Public Health Origins — Chadwick and the Sanitary Reform Movement
Edwin Chadwick (1800–1890) was a lawyer and social reformer who produced the foundational data-driven argument for state intervention in the built environment. His Report on the Sanitary Condition of the Labouring Population of Great Britain (1842) demonstrated, through mortality statistics disaggregated by housing type and location, that:
- Life expectancy in industrial towns (Manchester, Leeds) was dramatically lower than in rural areas.
- Mortality tracked sanitary conditions (water supply, drainage, waste removal) more closely than any other variable.
- The costs of disease (lost labour, poor relief) exceeded the costs of sanitary improvement.
The policy consequence was the Public Health Act 1848, which established Local Boards of Health empowered to require property owners to connect to sewers, provide clean water, and maintain housing standards. This was the first statutory framework for regulating the built environment in the public interest — and therefore the institutional origin of planning as a state function.
| Milestone | Year | Significance |
|---|---|---|
| Chadwick Sanitary Report | 1842 | First systematic data linking housing conditions to mortality |
| Public Health Act (UK) | 1848 | First statutory basis for environmental health intervention |
| Artisans’ and Labourers’ Dwellings Improvement Act | 1875 | First statutory power to clear slum areas |
| Housing of the Working Classes Act | 1890 | Consolidated housing powers; local authorities can build housing |
| Town Planning Act (UK) | 1909 | First statute explicitly using the term “town planning” |
Exam Anchor: Chadwick = public health origins of planning. Sanitary Report 1842 → Public Health Act 1848. Planning mandate came from epidemiology, not aesthetics. This lineage is distinct from the utopian reformist tradition — Chadwick worked within the state, not in withdrawal from it.
C4. Scientific and Rational Planning — Patrick Geddes
Patrick Geddes (1854–1932) transformed planning from a reactive sanitary intervention into a proactive, survey-based discipline. Trained as a biologist under Thomas Huxley, Geddes brought an ecological method to the study of cities: understand the organism (city) in its environment before proposing any intervention.
The Geddesian Triad — Folk–Place–Work
| Element | Geddesian term | Ecological equivalent | Planning implication |
|---|---|---|---|
| People / Community | Folk | Organism | Social structure, culture, and community networks must be understood |
| Physical environment | Place | Environment | Natural and built setting constrains and enables human activity |
| Economic activity | Work | Function | The productive life of a city must be integrated with, not separated from, its social and physical dimensions |
The triad is not three independent variables — it is a feedback triangle. Changes in Work (deindustrialisation) alter the composition of Folk (outmigration) and the condition of Place (building abandonment). Planning that addresses only one element without understanding the others will produce unintended consequences.
Conservative Surgery
Geddes opposed wholesale slum clearance. His method — Conservative Surgery — advocated removing only what was genuinely harmful (the specific building or block that was structurally dangerous or causing a specific health hazard) while preserving the existing street network, community relationships, and building fabric that sustained urban life. He demonstrated Conservative Surgery in his survey work in Dunfermline, Edinburgh, and in India (reports on cities including Balrampur, Lahore, and Indore, commissioned by the Indian government between 1914 and 1924).
Other key contributions:
| Concept | Definition | Exam distinction |
|---|---|---|
| Conurbation | A continuous built-up area formed when two or more adjacent cities and towns merge through outward growth | Geddes coined the term; distinct from metropolitan area (administrative) |
| Region as planning unit | The natural region — defined by watershed, topography, and ecological character — is the proper unit of analysis; the city cannot be understood outside its regional context | Contrast with CIAM’s focus on the city as a self-contained design object |
| Survey → Analysis → Plan | Planning must be preceded by comprehensive survey of natural conditions, historical development, and social characteristics | Contrast with utopian top-down blueprint approach |
| Cities in Evolution (1915) | Geddes’s primary theoretical text; applied evolutionary biology to urban development | Key publication date — GATE has tested this |
Exam Anchor — Geddes: Triad = Folk–Place–Work (Organism–Environment–Function). Conservative Surgery = minimum intervention, preserve fabric. Conurbation = continuous merged urban area. Survey → Analysis → Plan. Cities in Evolution 1915. Father of Modern Town Planning AND Regional Planning.
C5. Lewis Mumford and the City Cycle
Lewis Mumford (1895–1990), American historian and a direct intellectual successor of Geddes, applied evolutionary thinking to urban history in The Culture of Cities (1938). His six-stage cycle is a descriptive model of urban rise and decline, not a deterministic law:
| Stage | Name | Character |
|---|---|---|
| 1 | Eopolis | Village-scale agricultural settlement; pre-urban |
| 2 | Polis | Trading town; accumulation of wealth from surrounding region |
| 3 | Metropolis | Regional city; merger of smaller towns and villages; cultural peak |
| 4 | Megalopolis | Overgrown city; uncontrolled migration; social indifference; decline begins |
| 5 | Tyrannopolis | Parasitic city; environmental deterioration; infrastructure decay; population flight |
| 6 | Necropolis | Dead city; war, famine, or epidemic completes collapse |
Mumford’s prescription was planned decentralisation — creating new, self-contained communities organised around the neighbourhood unit — as an alternative to the megalopolitan trajectory. His The City in History (1961) extended this analysis across civilisations.
Exam Anchor — Mumford: Six-stage sequence is an absolute test item. Metropolis = cultural peak (Stage 3). Megalopolis = where decline begins (Stage 4) — not the terminal stage. Necropolis = terminal stage (Stage 6). Mumford ≠ Geddes: Mumford is a historian-urbanist; Geddes is a biologist-planner.
C6. CIAM and the Functional City
The Congrès Internationaux d’Architecture Moderne (CIAM) was founded in 1928 at La Sarraz, Switzerland, by Le Corbusier, Sigfried Giedion, and twenty-four other architects. Its defining document, the Athens Charter (1933), emerged from the Fourth CIAM Congress held aboard a ship sailing from Marseilles to Athens, and codified the functional city doctrine:
The Four Functions of CIAM:
| Function | Urban manifestation | CIAM prescription |
|---|---|---|
| Dwelling | Housing for the population | High-rise residential towers set in parkland; maximum sunlight and air |
| Work | Employment / production | Industrial zones separated from residential by buffer; office clusters near circulation |
| Recreation | Leisure, sport, culture | Large open spaces and parkland; sports facilities outside residential zones |
| Circulation | Movement between functions | Hierarchical road network; pedestrians and vehicles separated |
Towers-in-park logic: By stacking dwelling in high-rise towers, CIAM freed ground-level space for parkland. Ground coverage could drop to 5–15% while residential density remained high. The logic appeared rational: maximum sunlight, maximum open space, maximum efficiency. The problem was that the freed ground became residual, unowned, and unsurveilled — neither private garden nor genuine park.
Jane Jacobs’s critique (1961): In The Death and Life of Great American Cities, Jacobs argued that CIAM’s four-function zoning destroyed the conditions for urban vitality. Vibrant city districts require the mixture of: primary uses that generate pedestrian movement at different times of day; buildings of varying age (low rents for small and marginal enterprises); short blocks with many street intersections; and sufficient concentration of people. CIAM’s towers-in-parkland eliminated mixed use, replaced short blocks with superblocks, and produced the dead zones between towers that became hotbeds of crime and social disintegration.
Exam Anchor — CIAM: Founded 1928. Athens Charter 1933. Four functions: Dwelling, Work, Recreation, Circulation. Towers-in-park = high-rise + low ground coverage + parkland. Jacobs critique = mixed use, short blocks, building age variety, concentration are the generators of vitality.
Source: Le Corbusier (1933). The Athens Charter; Jacobs, J. (1961). The Death and Life of Great American Cities. New York: Random House.
C7. Post-CIAM Revolt — Team X, Advocacy, and Equity Planning
Team X
Team X (also written Team 10) was a loose association of younger architects and planners who formed within CIAM and precipitated its dissolution at the Dubrovnik Congress in 1956. Core members included Alison and Peter Smithson (UK), Aldo van Eyck (Netherlands), and Jaap Bakema (Netherlands).
Their Doorn Manifesto (1954) rejected CIAM’s reduction of the city to abstract functional categories and proposed instead that planning must begin with scales of human association:
| Scale of association | Physical equivalent |
|---|---|
| House | The dwelling |
| Street | The immediate neighbourhood cluster |
| District | The quarter or urban village |
| City | The complete urban organism |
For Team X, the city’s problem was not inefficient zoning but the loss of identity, belonging, and community — what the Smithsons called “the pattern of association.” Importantly, Team X was not Brutalism. Brutalism (as exemplified in some Smithson projects) is an architectural aesthetic — exposed concrete, honest material expression. Team X was a theoretical position about urban scale and human association, not a style.
Advocacy Planning — Paul Davidoff (1965)
Paul Davidoff’s essay Advocacy and Pluralism in Planning argued that the “rational comprehensive” model of planning — in which the planner acts as a neutral technical expert serving the public interest — was a fiction. In practice, official plans served the interests of dominant groups while displacing minority communities, the poor, and the powerless. Davidoff proposed that planners should act as advocates, representing specific constituencies (as lawyers represent clients) and producing plural plans that expose whose interests official plans serve.
Equity Planning — Norman Krumholz (1969–1979)
Krumholz implemented advocacy planning principles as Cleveland City Planning Director. The Cleveland Policy Plan (1975) explicitly prioritised the interests of disadvantaged residents in planning decisions — arguing that planning resources and infrastructure investment should be directed toward those with fewest options, not toward economic growth targets that primarily benefited higher-income residents.
Exam Anchor — Team X: Doorn Manifesto 1954. Human associations — house, street, district, city — as the basis for planning. Team X ≠ Brutalism (style vs. theory). Advocacy planning = Davidoff 1965 — planner as advocate for excluded groups. Equity planning = Krumholz — Cleveland Policy Plan — planning for those with fewest choices.
C8. Systems Planning — Brian McLoughlin
Brian McLoughlin’s Urban and Regional Planning: A Systems Approach (1969) introduced the concept, drawn from cybernetics and general systems theory, that the city is a system of interrelated components (land uses, transport networks, economic activities, population) existing in dynamic equilibrium, continually exchanging inputs and outputs with its environment.
Key implications for planning:
| Systems concept | Planning application |
|---|---|
| City as a system | Components are interdependent; changing one (building a new road) changes others (land use, travel demand, density) |
| Feedback loops | Plan interventions generate responses that feed back and alter initial conditions; planning must model these loops |
| Dynamic equilibrium | Cities are not static; plans must anticipate change, not fix a single desired end-state |
| Monitoring and control | Planning becomes continuous — survey, model, intervene, re-survey — rather than a one-time plan-making exercise |
McLoughlin’s systems approach supported the use of mathematical models in planning (transportation models, land-use models) and was the intellectual foundation for structure plan methodology in the UK after the Town and Country Planning Act 1968.
Critical limitation: Systems planning was criticised for treating the city as value-neutral — a technical system to be optimised — while ignoring the political and distributional questions of whose equilibrium was being maintained. This critique led directly to communicative planning.
Exam Anchor — McLoughlin: Urban and Regional Planning: A Systems Approach (1969). City as interrelated system. Dynamic equilibrium. Continuous monitoring and adjustment. Systems planning precedes communicative planning in the lineage.
C9. Communicative Planning — Forester and Healey
Communicative planning (also called collaborative or deliberative planning) emerged in the 1980s and 1990s as a theoretical response to both the technocratic limitations of rational comprehensive planning and the political limitations of advocacy planning. Its philosophical foundation is Jürgen Habermas’s theory of communicative rationality — the idea that rational outcomes emerge not from expert calculation but from undistorted, inclusive, good-faith communication among all affected parties.
| Thinker | Key work | Central argument |
|---|---|---|
| John Forester | Planning in the Face of Power (1989) | Planners work in political environments shaped by power; effective planning practice requires understanding how power distorts communication and how to counteract that distortion through structured argumentation |
| Patsy Healey | Collaborative Planning: Shaping Places in Fragmented Societies (1997) | Planning must be a collaborative, inclusive, and consensus-building process among all stakeholders; the planner’s role is to facilitate dialogue, not to impose technical solutions |
Communicative planning ≠ participatory planning only
This is a critical exam distinction. Participatory planning is a technique — holding public meetings, conducting surveys, gathering feedback from residents. Communicative planning is a theoretical framework that:
– Treats communication itself as the source of rational planning decisions (not just as an input to expert analysis)
– Requires equal access to the deliberative process — power asymmetries must be actively addressed
– Produces plans through consensus, not through the planner’s technical judgment supplemented by consultation
– Is grounded in Habermas’s theory of communicative action — participatory planning does not need this philosophical foundation
Exam Anchor — Communicative planning: Forester (1989) + Healey (1997). Philosophical foundation = Habermas communicative rationality. Planner as facilitator of structured dialogue, not neutral technical expert. Communicative planning ≠ merely participatory planning.
C10. Contemporary Responses — New Urbanism, Smart Growth, Compact City
These three frameworks are post-1980 design and policy responses to the consequences of post-war suburban sprawl (automobile dependence, land consumption, social segregation, loss of walkable street life). They share a common critique but differ in emphasis.
| Framework | Proponents | Core principles | Indian policy parallel |
|---|---|---|---|
| New Urbanism | Andres Duany, Elizabeth Plater-Zyberk (TND — Traditional Neighbourhood Design); Peter Calthorpe (TOD) | Charter of New Urbanism (1996): walkable blocks, mixed use, defined civic space, human-scale streets, transit access; design codes as instruments | Smart Cities Mission area-based development; URDPFI mixed-use zone standards |
| Smart Growth | US-EPA Smart Growth Network (1990s) | Ten principles: mixed land uses; compact design; walkable neighbourhoods; variety of transportation choices; infill; open space preservation; community involvement; unique neighbourhood character | URDPFI 2015 zoning hierarchy; TOD policy (Delhi, Mumbai) |
| Compact City | Jane Jacobs (critique of dispersal); Jenks, Burton & Williams — The Compact City: A Sustainable Urban Form? (1996) | High density + mixed use + reduced car dependence + social interaction = environmental and social sustainability | Urban renewal and densification policy; FSI relaxation around transit nodes |
Critical distinctions:
– New Urbanism is primarily an architectural and urban design movement — it produces design codes, pattern books, and specific neighbourhood plans (Seaside, Florida; Kentlands, Maryland — cite in Ch 5 context only; do not repeat project numerics here).
– Smart Growth is primarily a policy and land-use regulatory framework — it operates through zoning reform, infrastructure investment priorities, and growth management legislation.
– Compact City is primarily a theoretical argument about the sustainable urban form — it underpins density policies but does not itself constitute a design code.
Exam Anchor — Contemporary frameworks: New Urbanism = design code + walkable neighbourhood (Duany, Plater-Zyberk, Calthorpe; Charter 1996). Smart Growth = policy framework, 10 principles, US-EPA. Compact City = theory (Jenks et al. 1996) = high density + mixed use + low car dependence. All three are anti-sprawl responses.
D. Comparison Tables and Timelines
D1. Planning Thought Timeline — 1840s to Present
| Era | Period | Key thinkers | Central concern | Method |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Pre-reform | Pre-1840 | — | Unregulated market growth; no public interest doctrine | Laissez-faire land market |
| Sanitary reform | 1840–1890 | Chadwick; Bazalgette; Shaftesbury | Public health; disease prevention; housing conditions | Statutory regulation; engineering infrastructure |
| Utopian / communitarian | 1800–1900 | Owen; Fourier; Cabet; Howard (transitional) | Escape from industrial city; intentional community design | Voluntary colonisation; cooperative ownership |
| Scientific / survey-based | 1890–1930 | Geddes; Unwin; Parker | Understand-then-plan; regional ecology; Conservative Surgery | Survey → Analysis → Plan |
| Modernist / functional | 1928–1960 | Le Corbusier; CIAM; Athens Charter | Efficiency, hygiene, light, air; functional separation | Comprehensive zoning; high-rise towers; tabula rasa clearance |
| Post-modernist critique | 1960–1980 | Jacobs; Team X; Davidoff; Krumholz | Mixed use, community fabric, power and exclusion | Advocacy; incremental renewal; community participation |
| Systems and rational | 1960–1980 | McLoughlin; Chadwick (Alan); Chapin | City as dynamic system; model-based forecasting | Mathematical models; structure plans; continuous monitoring |
| Communicative / collaborative | 1980–present | Forester; Healey; Innes | Power, communication, consensus-building | Structured deliberation; stakeholder workshops; consensus plans |
| Contemporary design-policy | 1990–present | Duany; Calthorpe; Jenks; smart growth network | Anti-sprawl; sustainability; compact urbanism; smart infrastructure | Design codes; TOD; mixed-use zoning; ICT integration |
D2. Geddes vs. CIAM vs. Communicative Planning — Three-Column Comparison
| Dimension | Geddes (scientific-survey) | CIAM (functional-modernist) | Communicative planning |
|---|---|---|---|
| Core metaphor | City as living organism | City as machine | City as arena of communication and power |
| Unit of analysis | Region (ecology + society + economy) | City (functional zones) | Stakeholder network (all affected parties) |
| Role of planner | Biological surveyor; diagnostician | Technical designer; form-giver | Facilitator; analyst of power; communicative broker |
| Method | Survey → Analysis → Plan | Comprehensive zone-based master plan | Structured deliberation; argumentation; consensus-building |
| Treatment of existing fabric | Conservative Surgery — preserve where possible | Tabula rasa — clear and rebuild | Contextual — existing conditions are the political starting point |
| View of community | Folk = living social organism to be understood | Dwelling unit = housing need to be quantified | Community = competing interests to be brought into dialogue |
| Attitude to change | Evolutionary; minimum intervention | Radical transformation | Negotiated and incremental |
| Key critique | Can be insufficiently directive; survey-heavy | Destroys existing street life and social fabric | Can privilege articulate voices; slow and process-heavy |
| Key text | Cities in Evolution (1915) | Athens Charter (1933) | Healey, Collaborative Planning (1997) |
D3. Mumford’s Six-Stage City Cycle
| Stage | 1 | 2 | 3 | 4 | 5 | 6 |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Name | Eopolis | Polis | Metropolis | Megalopolis | Tyrannopolis | Necropolis |
| Character | Village | Trading town | Regional city (peak) | Overgrown city | Parasitic city | Dead city |
| Trajectory | Growth | Growth | Peak | Decline begins | Accelerating decay | Collapse |
Exam Anchor: Stage 3 (Metropolis) = cultural and social peak. Stage 4 (Megalopolis) = where decline begins — not the end. Stage 6 (Necropolis) = terminal. Questions often test whether students know the sequence and which stage marks the inflection point.
E. Common Confusions
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Geddes’s Folk–Place–Work triad ≠ CIAM’s four functions. The triad is an analytical framework for understanding what a city is (its constituent relationships). CIAM’s four functions are a prescriptive framework for what a city should be organised into (zones). One is diagnostic; the other is normative.
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Mumford’s Metropolis ≠ contemporary usage of the word. In Mumford’s cycle, Metropolis is Stage 3 — the cultural peak, not the overgrown problem city. In everyday usage, “metropolis” connotes a large, possibly overwhelming city. Exam questions test the Mumford-specific meaning.
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Team X ≠ Brutalism. Team X was a theoretical revolt against CIAM functionalism — focused on human associations, scale, and identity. Brutalism is an architectural aesthetic (exposed concrete, honest structure) that some Team X members (the Smithsons) practiced but that is conceptually distinct from the Team X theoretical position.
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Communicative planning ≠ participatory planning only. Participation is a technique. Communicative planning is a Habermas-grounded theoretical position that locates the source of rational planning outcomes in structured communicative rationality, not in expert technical analysis supplemented by community consultation.
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Conservative Surgery ≠ simple incremental improvement. Geddes’s Conservative Surgery is a specific methodological principle: intervene at the minimum scale necessary to remove a specific harm, preserving surrounding fabric. It is not a general preference for “going slowly.”
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Chadwick (Edwin) ≠ Chadwick (Alan). Edwin Chadwick (1800–1890) is the sanitary reformer. Alan Chadwick and others associated with systems planning (1960s–70s) are different figures. The shared surname is a known trap.
F. Exam Traps
| Trap | Incorrect Belief | Correct Principle |
|---|---|---|
| Geddes triad = CIAM four functions | Both are frameworks about “what a city needs” | Geddes triad = diagnostic/analytical (Folk–Place–Work). CIAM four functions = prescriptive/normative (Dwelling–Work–Recreation–Circulation). Entirely different theoretical registers. |
| Mumford’s Megalopolis = terminal stage | The overgrown city is where the cycle ends | Megalopolis (Stage 4) is where decline begins. Tyrannopolis (5) is accelerating decay. Necropolis (6) is the terminal stage. |
| Team X = Brutalism | Smithsons did Brutalist buildings therefore Team X = Brutalism | Team X is a theoretical position about human association scales. Brutalism is an architectural aesthetic. The Smithsons practiced both; they are not the same thing. |
| Owen’s New Lanark = failed colony | Owen’s colonies all failed | New Lanark (Scotland) was a successful cooperative factory town that Owen inherited and transformed. New Harmony (Indiana, USA) was Owen’s own colony and did fail (~2 years). |
| Communicative planning = holding public meetings | Public participation satisfies communicative planning requirements | Communicative planning requires communicative rationality (Habermas) — equal access, undistorted dialogue, and consensus as the source of rational decisions. Public meetings may or may not achieve this. |
| CIAM founded 1933 | Athens Charter date = CIAM founding date | CIAM founded 1928 (La Sarraz, Switzerland). Athens Charter produced 1933 (Fourth Congress). Two different dates. |
| Davidoff’s advocacy = planner as community organiser | Advocacy planning means going to the community | Davidoff’s model is professional advocacy — the planner as lawyer-equivalent, producing technically rigorous alternative plans that represent specific excluded constituencies. |
| Smart Growth is a US-only concept | Smart Growth is irrelevant to GATE India | Smart Growth principles (compact development, transit, mixed use, infill) are embedded in URDPFI 2015, Smart Cities Mission, and TOD policy frameworks in India. |
| Conservative Surgery = slum clearance | Geddes supported clearing bad housing | Conservative Surgery opposes wholesale clearance. It advocates minimum intervention — remove only the specific harmful element, preserve the rest. |
| Compact city = high-rise only | Compactness requires towers | Compact city = high density + mixed use + reduced car dependence. Density can be achieved through medium-rise perimeter block forms, not only towers. Jacobs specifically preferred medium-rise diversity over tower monoculture. |
| Fourier’s Phalanstère was built | Fourier built cooperative communities | Fourier’s Phalanstère was largely theoretical. The Familistère at Guise (France, 1859) was built by Jean-Baptiste Godin as a partial implementation, but it was not Fourier’s own project. |
G. Answer-Writing Cues
For MCQ/MSQ questions testing thinker attribution:
“The concept of [term] was introduced by [thinker] in [publication, year]. The central argument was [one-sentence summary]. It is distinct from [commonly confused concept] in that [specific distinguishing criterion].”
Example: “The concept of Conservative Surgery was introduced by Patrick Geddes in his survey work and Cities in Evolution (1915). The central argument was that the minimum intervention necessary to remove a specific harm should be preferred over wholesale clearance, which destroys existing social fabric. It is distinct from slum clearance in that it preserves the existing street network and community structure rather than replacing them.”
For MSQ questions asking which of the following are associated with CIAM:
Test each option against: (1) is this a CIAM four-function concept? (2) does it refer to towers-in-park spatial logic? (3) is it from the 1928–1959 CIAM period? Options that refer to human associations, advocacy, or communicative rationality belong to post-CIAM theory, not CIAM itself.
For attribution-chain questions (who critiqued whom):
“Jacobs critiqued CIAM’s functional city logic (not Geddes). Team X critiqued CIAM’s abstraction (not Geddes or Mumford). Davidoff critiqued the rational-comprehensive planning model (not CIAM directly). McLoughlin operationalised the rational-comprehensive model through systems theory.”
For timeline sequencing MSQs:
Commit the sequence: Chadwick (1842) → Geddes (1915) → CIAM/Athens Charter (1933) → Team X / Doorn Manifesto (1954) → Jacobs critique (1961) → Davidoff (1965) → McLoughlin (1969) → Forester (1989) → Healey (1997) → Charter of New Urbanism (1996).
H. PYQ Linkage Note
| Topic | Exam appearance | Pattern |
|---|---|---|
| Geddes triad | GATE AR, UPSC HM, State TCP entrance | Direct identification — “Which of the following is NOT part of the Geddesian triad?” or MSQ “Which two elements form part of Geddes’s Folk–Place–Work framework?” |
| Mumford cycle stages | GATE AR, planning competitive exams | Sequence correct/incorrect; identify which stage = cultural peak; identify terminal stage |
| CIAM four functions | GATE AR; B2 planning theory | “Which of the following is NOT one of CIAM’s four urban functions?” (common distractor: “housing” vs. “dwelling”; “industry” vs. “work”) |
| Athens Charter date | GATE AR direct recall | 1933; distinction from CIAM founding (1928) |
| Communicative vs. participatory planning | GATE AR, UPSC | Conceptual distinction; attribution to Forester/Healey |
| Conservative Surgery | Planning theory MCQs | Definition; attribution to Geddes; distinction from clearance |
| Advocacy planning | GATE AR B2 | Attribution to Davidoff (1965); distinction from communicative planning |
| Owen / Fourier / Cabet | Occasional GATE; TCP theory papers | Attribution of colony type; which colonies were built vs. theoretical |
I. Mini-Check — Lesson 10.1
Q1. (MSQ) Which of the following concepts are correctly attributed to Patrick Geddes?
Select all that apply.
(A) Folk–Place–Work triad as the analytical basis for urban planning
(B) The four functions of Dwelling, Work, Recreation, and Circulation
(C) Conservative Surgery — minimum intervention to preserve existing urban fabric
(D) Conurbation — a continuous built-up area formed by merger of adjacent urban settlements
(E) The six-stage city cycle from Eopolis to Necropolis
Answer: A, C, D
B = CIAM / Athens Charter (1933). E = Lewis Mumford (The Culture of Cities, 1938). Geddes = A, C, D.
Q2. (MSQ) Team X’s Doorn Manifesto (1954) proposed that urban planning should be organised around which of the following scales of human association?
Select all that apply.
(A) House
(B) Functional zone
(C) Street
(D) District
(E) City
Answer: A, C, D, E
B (functional zone) is the CIAM organisational unit that Team X explicitly rejected. The four scales in the Doorn Manifesto are: house, street, district, city.
Q3. (MCQ) Edwin Chadwick’s Report on the Sanitary Condition of the Labouring Population of Great Britain (1842) is significant in the history of urban planning primarily because it:
(A) Proposed a network of garden cities to relieve overcrowding in industrial towns
(B) Established, through mortality data, that housing and sanitary conditions were direct determinants of public health, creating an evidence base for state intervention in the built environment
(C) Introduced the concept of zoning to separate residential areas from industrial uses
(D) Argued that planners must conduct surveys of Folk, Place, and Work before proposing interventions
Answer: B
A = Howard (1898). C = modern zoning (US, early 20th century). D = Geddes. Chadwick = data-driven case for sanitary intervention in housing and infrastructure.
Q4. (MCQ) In Lewis Mumford’s six-stage city cycle, which stage represents the cultural and social peak of urban development, after which decline begins?
(A) Eopolis
(B) Polis
(C) Metropolis
(D) Megalopolis
Answer: C
Metropolis (Stage 3) = regional city at cultural peak. Megalopolis (Stage 4) = where decline begins. Eopolis (Stage 1) = pre-urban village. Polis (Stage 2) = trading town, early growth.
Q5. (MCQ) Communicative planning, as theorised by John Forester and Patsy Healey, is philosophically grounded in:
(A) The rational-comprehensive model of technical planning expertise
(B) Jane Jacobs’s critique of functional zoning and the conditions for urban vitality
(C) Jürgen Habermas’s theory of communicative rationality, locating rational outcomes in structured, inclusive deliberation
(D) The systems approach of Brian McLoughlin, treating the city as a dynamic equilibrium of interacting components
Answer: C
Communicative planning’s explicit philosophical foundation is Habermas’s communicative rationality — this is what distinguishes it from merely participatory planning. A = rational-comprehensive model (pre-communicative). B = Jacobs = urban vitality critique of CIAM. D = McLoughlin = systems planning.