Peets, Elbert, 1886-1968
Variant namesBiographical notes:
Landscape architect, city planner.
Elbert Peets received his B.A. from Western Reserve University and his M.L.A. from the Harvard University School of Landscape Architecture and City Planning. He worked for Pray, Hubbard and White, Boston landscape architects, for a year before joining with Werner Hegemann to plan Kohler, a company town founded by Walter S. Kohler, near Sheboygan, Wisconsin. Peets and Hegemann also collaborated in the planning of Washington Highlands, a subdivision in Milwaukee, Wisconsin; of Wyomissing Park, a subdivision in Reading, Pennsylvania; and in the writing of THE AMERICAN VITRUVIUS: AN ARCHITECT'S HANDBOOK OF CIVIC ART (1922). From 1923-1935 Peets worked in private practice in Cleveland, Ohio. He also worked on the planning for Greendale (near Milwaukee), one of three greenbelt towns built by the U.S. Farm Resettlement Administration headed by Rexford Guy Tugwell under Franklin D. Roosevelt. From 1938-1944 he was Chief of the Site Planning Section of the U.S. Housing Authority. With the firm of Loebl, Schlossman & Bennett, he participated in the planning for the town of Park Forest (near Chicago, Illinois), a project initiated by Nathan Manilow, Treasurer of American Community Builders, Inc., and Philip Klutznick, President. In the 1950s, Peets was a member of the Fine Arts Commission and served as consultant to the National Capital Park and Planning Commission.
Peets did site planning in Washington, D.C., lectured at Harvard and Yale, and served as consultant to several private planning firms. He also wrote numerous articles on planning and landscape architecture.
From the description of Elbert Peets papers, 1883-1983, 1904-1974 (bulk). (Cornell University Library). WorldCat record id: 64071932
Elbert Peets received his B.A. from Western Reserve University and his M.L.A. from the Harvard University School of Landscape Architecture and City Planning. He worked for Pray, Hubbard and White, Boston landscape architects, for a year before joining with Werner Hegemann to plan Kohler, a company town founded by Walter S. Kohler, near Sheboygan, Wisconsin. Peets and Hegemann also collaborated in the planning of Washington Highlands, a subdivision in Milwaukee, Wisconsin; of Wyomissing Park, a subdivision in Reading, Pennsylvania; and in the writing of The American Vitruvius: An Architect's Handbook of Civic Art (1922). From 1923-1935 Peets worked in private practice in Cleveland, Ohio. He also worked on the planning for Greendale (near Milwaukee), one of three greenbelt towns built by the U.S. Farm Resettlement Administration headed by Rexford Guy Tugwell under Franklin D. Roosevelt. From 1938-1944 he was Chief of the Site Planning Section of the U.S. Housing Authority. With the firm of Loebl, Schlossman & Bennett, he participated in the planning for the town of Park Forest (near Chicago, Illinois), a project initiated by Nathan Manilow, Treasurer of American Community Builders, Inc., and Philip Klutznick, President. In the 1950s, Peets was a member of the Fine Arts Commission and served as consultant to the National Capital Park and Planning Commission.
Peets did site planning in Washington, D.C., lectured at Harvard and Yale, and served as consultant to several private planning firms. He also wrote numerous articles on planning and landscape architecture.
This sketch was largely done by Paul Spreiregen, editor of On the Art of Designing Cities (1968), a collection of Elbert Peets' writings. Several additions and corrections have been made since the arranging of the Elbert Peets Papers.
From the guide to the Elbert Peets papers, 1883-1983, 1904-1974, (Division of Rare and Manuscript Collections, Cornell University Library)
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Subjects:
- City planners
- City planning
- Landscape architects
- Landscape architecture
Occupations:
Places:
- Washington Highlands (Milwaukee, Wis.) (as recorded)
- Park Forest (Ill.) (as recorded)
- Washington (D.C.) (as recorded)
- Boston (Mass.) (as recorded)
- Park Forest (Ill.) (as recorded)
- Cleveland (Ohio) (as recorded)
- Boston (Mass.) (as recorded)
- Wyomissing Park (Reading, Pa.) (as recorded)
- Washington Highlands (Milwaukee, Wis.) (as recorded)
- Greendale (Pa.) (as recorded)
- Washington (D.C.) (as recorded)
- Cleveland (Ohio) (as recorded)
- Greendale (Pa.) (as recorded)
- Kohler (Wis.) (as recorded)
- Wyomissing Park (Reading, Pa.) (as recorded)
- Kohler (Wis.) (as recorded)