A Century of Planning in Cleveland” is a permanent exhibit of the various plans for twentieth-century Cleveland presented in their historical, social, and economic contexts. It is part of the Maxine Goodman Levin College of Urban Affairs’s initiative to educate the public about the legacy of Cleveland’s planning professionals and the significant role of planning in the city’s development. The following narrative is drawn from the exhibit guide.
Grabowski, J.J.
, and W.C. Leedy Jr.The Terminal Tower, Tower City Center: A historical perspective. Cleveland, OH: Western Reserve Historical Society.
2.
Keating, D.
, and N. Krumholz, 1991. Downtown plans of the 1980s: The case for more equity in the 1990s. Journal of the American Planning Association. 57 (2): 136-152.
3.
Kolson, K.2001. Big plans: The Allure and Folly of Urban Design. Baltimore: Johns Hopkins University Press.
4.
Krumholz, N.
, and J. Forester. 1990. Making Equity Planning Work: Leadership in the public sector. Philadelphia: Temple University Press.
5.
Miller, C.P.
, and R.A. Wheeler. 1997. Cleveland: A Concise History, 1796-1996. Bloomington: Indiana University Press.
6.
Rarick, H.M.1986. Progressive Vision: The Planning of Downtown Cleveland, 1903-1930. Cleveland, OH: Cleveland Museum of Art in cooperation with Indiana University Press.
7.
Van Tassel, D.D.
, and J.J. Grabowski, eds. 1996. Encyclopedia of Cleveland History. Bloomington: Indiana University Press.