Patrick Abercrombie was an important figure in post-war town
planning in England.
He was born in 1879 in Ashton upon Mersey which was then in
Cheshire (now part of Greater Manchester). He qualified as an architect and his
earliest architectural experience was in Liverpool, where he began to formulate
his ideas about town planning.
In the 1920s he worked on a series of urban planning studies
and proposed that London should be surrounded by a “green belt” of land that
would not be subject to urban spread.
He was a member of a 1937 Royal Commission on population
distribution, on which he stressed the need to mitigate the hazards of
industrial and urban concentration.
The Second World War, with the intense bombing of British
cities, brought the problem of urban reconstruction to the fore and gave
Abercrombie the perfect opportunity to put his theories into practice. Between 1941 and 1946 he prepared detailed
plans for London and its immediate surrounds, the West Midlands, Hull,
Plymouth, and the first “new towns”.
The best surviving example of an Abercrombie planning scheme
is probably Plymouth, characterized by the presence of orbital roads and the
separation of traffic from pedestrians in shopping areas.
Today’s conservationists are often critical of Abercrombie’s
work because of the scale of demolition of existing buildings that his plans
often involved.
Patrick Abercrombie, who was knighted in 1945, died in 1957.
Also the County of London Park System https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Park_system
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