The City as Campus
Urbanism and Higher Education in Chicago
A social and design history of the urban campus
264 Pages, 7 x 10 in
- Paperback
- 9780816665655
- Published: February 9, 2011
Details
The City as Campus
Urbanism and Higher Education in Chicago
ISBN: 9780816665655
Publication date: February 9th, 2011
264 Pages
10 x 7
"In The City as Campus, Sharon Haar illuminates the highly-charged relationship of higher education to the American metropolis, using as a case study the University of Illinois, Chicago, the exemplary model of the massive urban commuter campus that has become the dominant form of higher education in so many metropolitan regions." —Robert Fishman, University of Michigan
The City as Campus shows the strain of this integration, detailing historical accounts of battles over space as campus designers faced the challenge of weaving the social, spatial, and architectural conditions of the urban milieu into new forms to meet the changing needs of academia. Through a close analysis of the history of higher education in Chicago, The City as Campus explores how the university's missions of service, teaching, and research have metamorphosed over time, particularly in response to the unique opportunities-and restraints-the city provides. Illustrating how Chicago serves as a site of pedagogical transformation and a location for the larger purpose of the academic community, The City as Campus presents a social and design history of the urban campus as an architectural idea and form.
Acknowledgments
List of Abbreviations
Introduction
1. New Institutions for a New Environment: Pedagogical Space in the Progressive City
2. City as Laboratory: Hull-House and the Rise of the Chicago School
3. Modern City, Modern Campus: Institutional Expansion and Urban Renewal in the Post-War Era
4. Classrooms off the Expressway: A New Mission for Higher Education
5. "Model of the Modern Urban University": The New Spatial Form of the Chicago Circle Campus
6. Campus Revolt: The Reform of the Commuter University
7. City as Campus: University Space in the Global City
Conclusion
Notes
Index