1st Edition

Big Places, Big Plans

By Mark B. Lapping Copyright 2004
    197 Pages
    by Routledge

    197 Pages
    by Routledge

    With origins in the late 1960s, a 'quiet revolution' in land use planning and control has taken hold across North America. First seen as a manifestation of the environmental movement, the revolution prompted governments at several levels to attempt to protect critical areas and vulnerable natural resources. Many of the most dramatic and far-reaching shifts in planning regimes have occurred in large-scale, environmentally unique or sensitive regions. It is these big places, looming large in the American and Canadian psyches, that are the focus of this edited volume. Each of the chapters reflects on the contemporary challenge of environmental and land use planning. Ten leading distinguished scholars here provide thoughtful analyses and critical insights into the processes and contexts shaping the innovative planning and policy schemes in seven regional landscapes.

    Contents: Introduction, Mark B. Lapping and Owen J. Furuseth; The beckoning country: Act 200, Act 250 and regional planning in Vermont, Robert M. Sanford and Mark B. Lapping; The Pinelands, Robert J. Mason; The Niagara fruit belt: planning conflicts in the preservation of a national resource, Hugh J. Gayler; Planning and land regulation at Lake Tahoe: five decades of experience, Robert H. Twiss; The Everglades: where will all the water go?, Jaap Vos; Unorganized Maine: regional planning without local government, Andrew Fisk; The history of planning in the Adirondack Park: the enduring conflict, Glenn R. Harris and Michael G. Jarvis; Lessons for the future, Owen J. Furuseth and Mark B. Lapping; Index.

    Biography

    MARK B. LAPPING University of Southern Maine. OWEN J. FURUSETH University of North Carolina, Charlotte.