Planning Paris Before Haussmann

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JHU Press, Oct 13, 2004 - Architecture - 336 pages

Long before Baron Haussmann remade Paris, several generations of intellectuals, planners, architects, engineers, and politicians envisioned a radical transformation of medieval Paris into a modern city that would be beautiful, rational, sanitary, and responsive to the needs of commerce and industry. Historian Nicholas Papayanis examines the emergence and evolution of modern urban planning in Paris between the end of the eighteenth and the middle of the nineteenth century, focusing on the principles and concerns that informed competing plans for the city.

Papayanis examines three major planning traditions in this period: functionalist, Saint-Simonian, and Fourierist. The latter two drew their inspiration from the utopian-socialist philosophers, while the former comprised practical proposals by civil engineers and administrators. Regardless of their perspective, the thinkers within each tradition critiqued the disorder, inefficiency, and social misery of Paris as it was, imagining a new city that balanced commerce, public health and safety, circulation, and social order. Ultimately, Papayanis finds, this vision of the modern industrial and commercial city lent itself to the creation of a hegemonic order that suited the demands of the state, capitalism, and the middle-class urbanite, often at the expense of other interests.

Planning Paris before Haussmann uncovers the intellectual ferment about city planning and urban reform that constituted a powerful intellectual and theoretical foundation for Haussmannization and for modern urban planning.

From inside the book

Contents

EighteenthCentury Roots of Modern Planning
13
Functionalist Planners before Haussmann
62
The SaintSimonians and Paris
129
The Fourierists and the New Paris
169
Planning the Paris Underground
201
The Simeon Commission
226
Conclusion
247
NOTES
257
BIBLIOGRAPHY
287
INDEX
323
Copyright

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About the author (2004)

Nicholas Papayanis is a professor emeritus of history at the City University of New York's Brooklyn College and the Graduate Center and the author of a biography of the revolutionary syndicalist leader Alphonse Merrheim as well as of two previous books on the history of Paris, "Horse-Drawn Cabs and Omnibuses in Paris" and "The Coachmen of Nineteenth-Century Paris."