ENDURING UTOPIA: SUSTAINING A SENSE OF PLACE IN THE GREENBELT NATIONAL HISTORIC LANDMARK DISTRICT
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2016
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MA in Historic Preservation
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To view a complete copy of this thesis please contact Goucher College Special Collections & Archives at archives@goucher.edu or (410) 337-6075.
Subjects
Greenbelt National Historic Landmark District
Greenbelt Towns Program
U.S. Resettlement Administration
U.S. Farm Security Administration
Clarence S. Stein
Garden Cities
Preserving Place
Cooperatives
Resident Selection
Historic preservation -- Theses
Planned communities -- Maryland -- Greenbelt -- Preservation
Greenbelt (Md.) -- Historic preservation
Greenbelt (Md.) -- Group identity -- Preservation
Greenbelt Towns Program
U.S. Resettlement Administration
U.S. Farm Security Administration
Clarence S. Stein
Garden Cities
Preserving Place
Cooperatives
Resident Selection
Historic preservation -- Theses
Planned communities -- Maryland -- Greenbelt -- Preservation
Greenbelt (Md.) -- Historic preservation
Greenbelt (Md.) -- Group identity -- Preservation
Abstract
With much of the focus of planning and development on revitalization, historic
communities are in need of long-term strategies to preserve their place and sense of
place. Greenbelt is a unique planned community designed with utopian ideals that
incorporated elements of Garden Cities, the Neighborhood Unit, and ideas tested at
other early examples of planned communities. The significance of Greenbelt lies in the
design of its buildings, the plan of the community and the cooperative culture that
persists today. Recent changes to the materials and design of the housing units pose a
threat to the integrity of Greenbelt. Through grassroots efforts, residents have had
success preserving historic components of the town. Yet the future is uncertain: the
majority of the historic components are not protected either through designation as a
County Historic District or by the City of Greenbelt.
Placemaking methods can be utilized to study and understand how place has
been preserved and how the cooperative culture has been transmitted through
generations of residents. The concept of memory pegs is presented as a way for
laymen and professionals to identify a community’s important places as the first step in
preserving those places and a sense of place. The related concepts of place, sense of
place, and sustainable places provide context for grasping how residents shape their
physical and social environment to reinforce identity and preserve a sense of place,
efforts from which we can learn about the preservation of Greenbelt’s and other
community’s tangible and intangible culture.