The Changing Image of the City: Planning for Downtown Omaha, 1945-1973The Changing Image of the City describes urban planning and development from the end of World War II to 1973, when major elements of the design of Nebraska's largest city were in place. Janet Daly-Bednarek shows how the appraches to planning shifted during a period that saw Omaha change from a hub of food processing and transportation to a postindustrial center dominated by insurance and by educational, medical, and other services. Finally, she surveys recent developments such as the Central Park Mall and the Old Market area in light of earlier plans and their implementation. In considering the changes that have occurred in Omaha, this book reveals much about the growth of professional urban planning in America. In Omaha, as elsewhere, planners dealt with power brokers, coped with rampant suburbanism and sprawling shopping malls, searched for ways to reverse the inner-city decay, and concerned themselves with historic preservation, beautification, and quality of life. |
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Contents
New Ideas and Changing Images i | 22 |
Omaha 19451973 | 41 |
Planning 19331945 | 77 |
Traditional Planning for a Traditional City 19451958 | 107 |
A City in Transition 19581966 | 149 |
Planning 19661973 | 187 |
Epilogue | 227 |
267 | |
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Common terms and phrases
activities agenda annexation beautification Blue Book booster buildings business community business leaders campaign Carter Lake Census Central Business District Central Omaha Plan Central Park Mall Chamber of Commerce changes charter city hall City Planning Department city's civic and business civic center Commerce Minutes Commerce Profile Company construction Creighton University cultural and recreational Daly Department Clip File downtown Omaha early economic employment experts facilities federal finance growth highway Ibid ideas important included industrial interests Kiewit landscape leadership Mall mayor meatpacking ment metropolitan area Missouri River municipal Nebraska Northern Natural Gas Northwestern Bell Omaha Chamber Omaha City Planning Omaha Public Library Omaha World-Herald open space percent Peter Kiewit Sons population postwar President private sector projects promote proposed retail Riverfront Development role Science Department Clip service economy sewer Social Science Department South Omaha streets Sun Newspapers tion traditional University of Omaha urban renewal
References to this book
Environmental Inequalities: Class, Race, and Industrial Pollution in Gary ... Andrew Hurley No preview available - 1995 |