View Single Post
  #2  
Old Posted May 6, 2016, 3:59 PM
OldDartmouthMark OldDartmouthMark is offline
Registered User
 
Join Date: May 2010
Posts: 10,243
Interesting article, Keith. While reading it I was reminded of MIT's online archive "Perceptual Form of the City", which documents Boston's buildings around the time of urban renewal in the 1950s:

Quote:
The objects in this collection relate to Kevin Lynch's study The Perceptual Form of the City, conducted in Boston, Massachusetts from 1954-1959.

In 1954 MIT Professor Kevin Lynch began studying city form in a five year project funded by The Rockefeller Foundation. The study was done under the direction of Lynch and Professor Gyorgy Kepes at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology Center for Urban and Regional Studies. Their research findings were the foundation of Lynch's theories on city planning discussed in his seminal work The Image of the City.

The Perceptual Form of the City study addressed the legibility and imageability of the American city in terms of the individual's perception of the urban landscape. The study focused on the cities of Boston, Massachusetts, Los Angeles, California, and Jersey City, New Jersey.

The collection includes photographs and records from the Boston phase of the project. The nearly 2,000 black & white photographs, shot by Nishan Bichajian, assistant to Professor Kepes, document the Boston urban environment during the mid-1950s prior to urban renewal. The records document the planning, preparation, and progress of the project (1951-1956), and the research process and findings (1954-1959). These records include field notes, interview transcripts, collected data, correspondence regarding the progress of the project and hand drawn maps.

Only a portion of the project documentation for The Perceptual Form of the City has been digitized. The entirety of the collection is part of the Kevin Lynch papers and is available for research use in the Institute Archives and Special Collections. A finding aid is available for the Kevin Lynch papers here.

The print photographs are available in the Rotch Visual Collections.
The archive of almost 2000 photos is a treasure trove of photographs which amounts to a 'slice of life' in mid 20th century Boston. The Flickr link below takes you directly to the photos. However, MIT's site linked below gives you the choice of viewing large, high-resolutions images if you so desire.

https://dome.mit.edu/handle/1721.3/33656

https://www.flickr.com/photos/mit-libraries

Not completely on topic, but at least a decent segue into some great 1950s photos of Boston...

Last edited by OldDartmouthMark; May 6, 2016 at 8:36 PM.
Reply With Quote