edward basset and lee koppelman

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    EDWARD BASSET and LEE

    KOPPELMAN

    F A R E A S T E R N U N I V E R S I T Y

    I N S T I T U T E O F A R C H I T E C T U R E A N D

    F I N E A R T S

    P L A N N I N G 2 4 1

    A R 0 8 4 1

    A R C H . W I L K I E D E L U M E N

    NARITO, ARGEOLYN S.

    ESCASA, KATHERINE JOY H.

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    EDWARD MURRAY BASSETT

    Born 1863 One of the founding fathers of modern day urban planning. Known as The Father of American Zoning Wrote the first comprehensive zoning ordinance in the United States, adopted by New York City in

    1916

    Basset is the son of merchant Charles R. Basset and Elvira Rogers Basset. He attended Hamilton College

    and Amherst College. He was elected to Phi Beta Kappa and joined the Delta Upsilon fraternity. He

    attended Columbia University Law School, and taught at a private school in Brooklyn. Bassett graduated

    from Columbia and was admitted to the bar, and began practicing law in Buffalo, New York. He married

    Annie R. Preston in 1890 and had five children including inventor and engineer Preston Bassett and

    geologist Isabel Basset Wasson.

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    Most of his work, both private and on committees, concerned

    City planning Zoning Legal issues surrounding fields

    Basset is credited with developing the freeway and parkway to describe a controlled access urban

    highway, based on the parkway concept but open to the commercial traffic.

    The parkway concept, intended for recreational driving, embodied many design concepts that would be

    integral to expressways, including wide right-of-way, control of access, elimination of grade crossings with

    other highways, and separated highway lanes that were blended into the contours of the land.

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    Bassett saw "freeways"--i.e., highways for the free flow of traffic--as adapting many of the parkway design

    concepts to serve transportation instead of recreation. Where parkways were dedicated to recreation, the

    freeway was dedicated to movement. To make the distinction, he delineated three kinds of thoroughfares:

    A "highway" is a strip of public land devoted to movementover which the abutting property ownershave the right of light, air and access.

    A "parkway" is a strip of public land devoted to recreationover which the abutting property ownershave no right of light, air or access.

    A "freeway" is a strip of public land devoted to movementover which the abutting property ownershave no right of light, air or access.

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    Everyone knows that new streets and highways that are intended to increase through vehicle capacity

    gradually become cluttered up at spots so as to make a limitation. This is caused by increase of cross

    streets, private driveways, new garages, gasoline stations, business places and parked automobiles. Astraffic becomes more intense, the obstacles increase, with the result that the highway intended to

    accommodate a fast traffic flow is slowed down to much less than its original capacity. Even if important

    grade crossings are eliminated, the driveways, gasoline stations, garages, stores and parked cars cause a

    great limitation.

    A parkwayallows a freer flow of traffic, because side streets and private driveways cannot enter it, and

    gasoline stations, garages, and stores cannot front upon it. The abutting owner has no right of light, air and

    access over the parkway. To make this clear, one should think of a parkway as an elongated park. It is well

    known that the authorities can erect a fence or wall around a park, leaving appropriate publicentrances. A

    parkway, however, is not for general use. As it is an elongated park, it must be used for recreational

    purposes, and consequently traffic is limited to pleasure vehicles.

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    Bassett's son and law partner, Howard M. Bassett, and City Planning Consultant Latham C. Squire

    explained the concept further in a 1932 article in The American City.[ The freeway, they explained, would

    be immediately practical for bridge approaches "where concentrated traffic should be freed fromdisturbances of unnecessary and parasitic uses." Freeways also would be practical for bypass routes

    allowing through traffic to circle shopping and business districts to relieve local congestion. The article

    summarized the advantages of the freeway concept:

    1. The free flow of traffic is permanently guaranteed because no local access is permitted except atcertain well-located points. Three or four traffic lanes would probably be provided in each direction,

    except where an extra lane is added at entrances and exits of freeway business centers and at

    highway intersections . . . . The freeway business center does away with the delay necessitated by

    driving off the roadway into a community business district to get food, supplies, etc.

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    2. The freeway is the safest possible kind of thoroughfare. Interference from local traffic is done awaywith entirely. The freeway business center in the middle of the roadway is not accessible to local

    traffic and is planned with the idea of safety, convenience and beauty.

    3. The freeway enhances property values. The screen of trees and shrubs provided on both sides ofthe roadway provides the best possible medium for diffusing the noise of the traffic and hides the

    roadway entirely from view. In this way the bordering property is made very desirable for residence

    use. Close proximity to a freeway is a decided advantage.

    4. Motorists on the freeway will, of course, need supplies of all kinds, as gasoline, oil, automotive parts,lunches, drugs, etc. [These] may be obtained in freeway business centers placed in the middle of the

    freeway on small streets at intervals ranging from three to ten miles along the route. They will be so

    designed that the stores and filling stations are made invisible from the freeway by proper

    landscaping, and arranged so that access from the freeway will in no way interfere with the free flow

    of the traffic. No local access is provided for these business centers. They are for the exclusive use

    of the freeway traveler.

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    LEE KOPPELMAN

    Born 1928 Dominated planning on Long Island from the 1960s until his May 2006 resignation from the Long

    Island Regional Planning Board.

    Koppelman drew up influential Master Plans for Long Island in 1969-70. Some of their most

    ambitious features remained on the drawing board such as

    An instant city to be constructed in the general vicinity of the Long Island Expressways Exit 68 A major commercial airport serving the New York City market, to be located at the site of an existing

    military airfield

    At least one bridge across the Long Island Sound A new North Shore parkway running parallel to the Long Island Expressway in Suffolk Country

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    The first three were revived, and presented as brand-new proposals by the Long Island development lobby

    between 1988 and 1992.

    The instant city, proposed anew by developer Wilbur Breslin became sprawling 2,100-acre (8km)mixed-use dream nicknamed WillyWorld, dominated by a giant shopping mall.

    A proposal for an air freight facility at the US Navy / Grumman property in Calverton and a high-speed ferry between Wading River and New Haven, Connecticut were candidly described in L.I.

    Business News and Newsday editorials, as first steps towards the long-awaited major passenger

    jetport and cross-Sound bridge, both vehemently opposed by NIMBY.

    These projects all remain in the proposal stage, early 2006.

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    Although primarily identified, in the public mind, with the schemes of the development lobby, Dr.

    Koppelman has also played a leading role in preserving open space, particularly in parklands

    purchased by Suffolk Country around 1970.

    He identified road run-off (non-point-source pollution) as the leading cause of deteriorating waterquality in local aquifers and estuaries, indicating an urgent need to limit the amount of paved-over

    area in coastal environments.

    He publicly opposed the WillyWorld shopping mall proposal, on the grounds that enough othersimilar projects were already in the works.

    Koppelmans environmental initiatives left a lasting legacy, while his major development proposals

    went nowhere, or were overwhelmed by the chaotic clutter of suburban sprawl.

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    Dr. Koppelman is regarded as the guru of a suburban growth coalition seeking to relocate

    economic and cultural activities, as well as population, from the boroughs of New York City to Long

    Island. The revival in New York Citys fortunes after 1980 tended to undermined the coalitions long -

    range strategy.

    Dr. Koppelman is the author, with Joseph De Chiara, of standard texts on planning

    Urban Planning and Design Criteria (Van Nostrand Reinhold, 1982) Site Planning Standards (McGraw Hill Co., 1978)

    Koppelman also serves as a professor in Stony Brook Universitys graduate program in Public

    Policy.

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    Dr. Koppelman seemed to follow the older planners footsteps in his own later years.

    His reputation was shaken in 1992, when a civic activist discovered that a Koppelman-led feasibility

    study of the Calverton air freight proposal had claimed that Lufthansa was interested in opening

    operations at the site- on the basis of one cold call, answered by a random blue-collar employee,

    who had in effect merely agreed with the caller that Calverton sounded like a nice place.