Gordon Culham: Living a 'useful life' through the professionalization of Canadian town planning and landscape architecture

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3 Scopus citations

Abstract

Gordon Joseph Culham (1891-1979), a landscape architect and town planner, was instrumental in the professionalization of both his disciplines in Canada. He helped lead the disorganized practitioners of the 1930s into the modern age and enabled them to assume their professional role in the improvement of Canada's urban centres. The discovery of an archive of Culham's papers provides a previously unavailable insight into the conceptualization and creation of the professions of landscape architecture and town planning in Canada. Culham characterized this as leading a 'useful life'. He prepared, practiced and enjoyed the power associated with the professions he helped found in leading this useful life. He was a Harvard graduate who worked with the greatest landscape architectural firm in America, the Olmsteds and with the premier British town planner, Thomas Adams. Culham returned to his homeland on the eve of the Depression with an unrivalled reputation. He brought with him a strong sense of professionalism and helped elevate a small, dispirited community of Canadian landscape architects and town planners into one united organization for almost two decades. Professional specialization was an inevitable outcome but Culham continued to bridge the divide between his chosen fields throughout his 'useful life'.

Original languageEnglish (US)
Pages (from-to)587-609
Number of pages23
JournalPlanning Perspectives
Volume27
Issue number4
DOIs
StatePublished - Oct 2012
Externally publishedYes

Keywords

  • Canada
  • Gordon Culham
  • Landscape architecture
  • Olmsted
  • Professionalization
  • Thomas Adams
  • Town planning
  • Urban reform

ASJC Scopus subject areas

  • Geography, Planning and Development

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