Highland Park and River Oaks : the origins of garden suburban community planning in Texas.

by Cheryl Caldwell Ferguson

Paper Book, 2014

Status

Available

Call number

307.12 Ferguson

Publication

Austin : University of Texas Press, [2014]

Description

"Shows how the developers of Highland Park in Dallas and River Oaks in Houston were trying to create better living conditions in a countryside atmosphere away from the uncontrolled development that had blighted late 19th-century and early 20th-century urban neighborhoods in Texas. Also explores why planned suburban and community growth failed at the city-wide level and remained confined to elite suburbs. Also looks at subdivisions in Fort Worth, San Antonio, Amarillo, Wichita Falls, Beaumont, Galveston, and Port Arthur to provide information on how city planners worked with landscape architects to incorporate infrastructure improvements, coordinate landscape planning, and employ such legal devices as restrictive covenants to shape elite space coherently. The work of Texas' foremost suburban house architects, such as C.D. Hill, William Ward Watkin, and John F. Staub, is also analyzed"--… (more)

Language

Physical description

xiii, 336 p.; 27 cm

ISBN

9780292748361

Local notes

In the early 20 century, developers from Baltimore to Beverly Hills built garden suburbs, a new kind of residential community that incorporated curvilinear roads and landscape design as picturesque elements in a neighborhood. This book chronicles the development of the two garden suburbs in Texas, Dallas' Highland Park and Houston's River Oaks.

Barcode

1042

DDC/MDS

307.12 Ferguson
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