The Too-Busy City: Atlanta and Urbanity at the End of the Twentieth Century Open Access
Hatfield, Edward Adair (2015)
Abstract
During the half-century after World War II, Atlanta and other Sunbelt cities underwent dramatic expansions, challenging orthodoxies of American urbanism and charting a rightward course in national politics. While historians have examined the political and economic implications of the region's growth, less has been said about the region's planning. By adopting an explicitly metropolitan approach to Atlanta's debates over expressway and roadway construction, rail transit, annexation and public administration, this dissertation explores the relationship that links the Sunbelt's planning regimes and political cultures. During the postwar period, city leaders embraced centralized planning to manage the region's explosive growth and to preserve the central business district's preeminence in an era of metropolitan expansion. But the expressways that were intended to save downtown only hastened suburban expansion, proposed annexation bids were foiled by racial animosity, and subsequent attempts to forge a regional consensus around rail transit only confirmed that metropolitan relations would be characterized by conflict rather than cooperation. In the years that followed, growth and development continued apace in Atlanta's suburbs. The central city meanwhile entered a steep decline, and its commitment to the public sphere existed in counterpoint to the political conservatism that flourished just beyond its limits. The announcement that Atlanta would host the Centennial Olympic Games vindicated the city's claims to international status and unleashed pressures for redevelopment not seen for decades. It also precipitated a campaign of neoliberal reform that would dramatically diminish the scope of the city's public sphere. The Games' administration by a privately-financed, non-profit corporation marked a turning point in the city's governance, providing the impetus for a host of market-based reforms in public housing, education and other fields of public administration that reflected the political ascendancy of the Sunbelt's suburban conservatives. In the final analysis, this dissertation argues that suburban separatism did not merely produce a political commitment to property rights and private enterprise on the metropolitan periphery. It ultimately succeeded in remaking cities in the image of their suburbs.
Table of Contents
Introduction. A City for Salesmen 1
Chapter 1. Planning for Progress 31
Chapter 2. "We Might as Well Leave Town" 91
Chapter 3. Black Power, White Noise 139
Chapter 4. The Born Again Freeway 203
Chapter 5. "The World's Next Great International City" 254
Conclusion. A City for Sale 335
Bibliography. 359
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