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Publications

The Center for Building Communities’ inaugural book, Designing for the Future, was published in February 2009, introducing the mission of the Center for Building Communities, as illustrated by previous community design projects created by CBC faculty in collaboration with upper-level Notre Dame students.

Please review our project album for an introduction to projects highlighted in the book.

Reviews

Reviews are written by Harold Henderson, the CBC’s director of communications. Henderson has reviewed books for the American Planning Association’s magazine Planning for more than 20 years. From 1985 to 2007 he was a staff writer at the weekly Chicago Reader, covering many topics, including environmental and planning issues. The opinions expressed in these reviews are his and not necessarily those of the University of Notre Dame or its School of Architecture.

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Blueprint for Disaster: The Unraveling of Chicago Public Housing

October 28, 2009

“At its core, public housing, as conceived by reformers in 1937, was a blueprint for disaster and could not have survived the postwar housing boom without fundamental changes. The need for these changes was actually recognized early on, but they were never seriously pursued. The crime was therefore not the effort to better house the poor but the failure by those in power to alter course and to fix evident mistakes. Leadership at all governmental levels abandoned its poverty-stricken residents in public housing — nowhere more than in Chicago.” {13}

Main Street Revisited: Time, Space, and Image Building in Small-Town America

October 01, 2009

“Rather than bemoan the loss of Main Street and condemn strip commercial areas, then, one would do well to see them as part of the rich visual variety of the American landscape today — a variety that reflects how much America has changed in the twentieth century. … if current preservation trends continue, Americans may find themselves anxiously preserving threatened shopping strips in, say, the year 2050, when these places too become ‘historic.’ After all, in the early 1950s, on the eve of Disney’s rediscovery of late-Victorian architecture, the buildings of the 1900 era were considered so much obsolete garish rubble by many Americans.” {8, 15}

Smart Growth Policies: An Evaluation of Programs and Outcomes

September 29, 2009

“No state did well on all smart growth principles.” But Indiana isn’t even trying.