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The 33 New Towns developed since 1946 comprise the most
sustained programme of new town development undertaken
anywhere in the world. Today they are home to over two
and a half million people.
The UK New Towns programme is recognised as a unique
social, economic and design initiative and is an international
role model for urban dispersal and planned development.
This publication brings together in a single source
for the first time ever a library and account of the
UK New
Towns
programme.
This includes over 40 master plans, over 60 key books,
articles, items of legislation, white papers and other
documents, together with interviews or papers from over
80 key practitioners and academics, over 3000 photographs,
a full set of annual reports of the 33 development corporations,
specially commissioned maps and full text word search
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The New Towns Record is available on DVD and costs £500 for a single user licence.
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The New Towns Record
provides a unique insight into the UK New Towns through a
vast amount of literature and the personal
experiences of those who created and manage, and who live
and work in the towns.
It is an invaluable research, practice
and teaching resource for all with an interest in urban development.
Until now, material on the UK New Towns has been scattered
and difficult to find. No other single source contains
such a comprehensive account of the programme and of
the development
of the 33 New Towns. The New Towns Record also contains
much original material.
Who Is It For?
The lessons of the UK New Towns are of worldwide relevance
and will be of interest and concern to anyone concerned with
urban development.
The New Towns Record will be of particular
interest to researchers, students, policy makers and professionals
in all areas of urban
development, including architecture, urban design, town
planning, urban policy and housing, geography, sociology,
social history,
economic development, surveying and landscape architecture.
It
will also be of interest to residents of the UK New Towns
who want to learn more about the history of their
towns.
Key Materials
Texts Include:
- Garden Cities of Tomorrow, by Ebenezer Howard
- Greater London
Plan 1944, by Sir Patrick Abercrombie
- Clyde Valley Regional
Plan 1946, by Sir Patrick Abercrombie
- New towns After the
War, by Sir Fredric Osborn
- The Building of Satellite Tons,
by C B Purdom
- Final Report of the "Reith Committee"
- Environmental
Planning, 1939-1969 Vol. III, by Prof J B Cullingworth
- The
New Towns Story, by Frank Schaffer
- The New Town Experience,
by Stephen Potter & Ray
Thomas
- New Towns: The British Experience, by Peter Self
- Aycliffe
to Cumbernauld: a study of seven new towns in their regions,
by Ray Thomas
- New Town, Home Town, the Lessons of Experience,
by Colin Ward
- New Towns, their Origins, Achievements and
Progress, by F Osborn & A
Whittick
- British New Towns, A Programme without
a Policy, by M Aldridge
- The Milton Keynes Planning Manual
- 41 New Town Master Plan
Documents
Practitioners
- Professor John Delafons, Private Secretary to Richard
Crossman MP, Minister of Housing and Local Government
- Professor
David Gosling, Architect at Runcorn and Irvine
- Sir Peter
Shepheard, Member of the "Abercrombie" Greater
London Plan team
- Dame Sylvia Crowe, Consultant Landscape
Architect to a number of early new towns
- Lionel Brett (Lord
Esher), Master Planner, Hatfield
- Professor Arthur Ling,
Master Planner, Runcorn
- Professor Nathaniel Lichfield, Economic
Planner, Milton Keynes Master Plan
- Bill MacKay, Road & Traffic
Engineer for a number of new towns
- Richard Phelps, General
Manager, Skelmersdale and Central Lancashire Development
Corporations
- Wyndham Thomas, General Manager, Peterborough
Development Corporation
- Lord Campbell, Chairman, Milton
Keynes Development Corporation
- Professor Sir Robert Grieve,
Member of the "Abercrombie" Clyde
Valley Team
- George Young, General Manager, East Kilbride
Development Corporation
- Sir Geoffrey Jellicoe, First Master
Planner, and designer of Water Garden, Hemel Hempstead
Academics & Commentators
- Dr Stephen Potter, The Open University
- Ray Thomas, The
Open University
- Professor J B Cullingworth
- Dr Stephen Ward, Oxford Brookes
University
- Terence Bendixson, Author and Urban Policy Analyst
- David
Hall, Past Director, Town and Country Planning Association
- Professor
Peter Hall, Author and Professor of Planning
- Professor David
Lock, Former Chief Planning Advisor, Department of the
Environment
Original Material
- Specially commissioned overviews town centres,
recreation, environment and landscape, employment, retailing,
public transport,
roads, public art and social issues for each new town.
- Questionnaire
returns and essays from people who live and work in the
new towns.
Obtaining A Copy
The New Towns Record was authorised and edited by IDOX,
with technical production undertaken by Logical Innovations
Ltd. The price is £500 for a single user licence. (University
and College Libraries – prices on application) inclusive
of postage and packing. VAT is payable at current rates where
applicable. There is no VAT for sales outside the European
Union or for VAT registered bodies inside the European Union.
For
further information, or to purchase The New Towns Record,
please contact:
Publications Tel: +44 (0) 141 574 1906 or
Email: publications@idoxplc.com
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