Harland Bartholomew & associates
Variant namesKnown as the dean of U.S. city planners, Harland Bartholomew (1889-1989) was considered the greatest authority on municipal planning in the mid-twentieth century. Born in Stoneham, Massachusetts in 1889, Bartholomew became City Planning Commissioner of St. Louis in 1919, the first full-time planner employed by an American city. That year he established Harland Bartholomew and Associates, a city planning consulting firm, serving as its chairman until his retirement in 1962. Bartholomew died December 2, 1989. Harland Bartholomew and Associates continues to be active and has designed city plans for several hundred cities across the United States, including Washington, D.C., and Richmond, Virginia in the Southeast to San Antonio and Los Angeles in the West. Harland Bartholomew and Associates (HBA) set up several regional offices across the country. An office in Richmond was established in 1961. The Richmond office of HBA began with a focus of providing urban renewal planning services to local governments throughout the East. These services continued to be the primary focus up into the late 1980s and early 1990s. International planning jobs began to become more prevalent in the late 1980s and soon grew to become a major market for the Richmond office in the early 1990s. That led to the establishment of a satellite office in Dubai, United Arab Emirates. The Richmond office also began working for U.S. Department of Defense clients, providing master planning services to military bases around the world as well as supporting similar project being carried out in HBA offices located in St. Louis and Sacramento. By 2002, the Richmond office's main client was the Department of Defense. HBA was purchased by the Parsons Corporation in the late 1980s. Their office in Richmond was designated as Parsons Planning Division.
From the description of Harland Bartholomew and Associates archives, 1961-1974. (James Branch Cabell Library). WorldCat record id: 652518806
Harland Bartholomew was born in Stoneham, Massachusetts in 1889 and died in St. Louis in December 1989. He came to St. Louis in 1916 at the invitation of the Civic League of St. Louis, with the charge of creating a comprehensive plan for the city of St. Louis. In 1919 he was appointed City Planning Commissioner, the first full-time planner employed by an American city. He served in that capacity until 1950. In 1919, he established Harland Bartholomew and Associates and served as its chairman until his retirement in 1962.
Harland Bartholomew and Associates designed city plans for several hundred cities across the United States. Many of these plans are represented in the collection. The firm's projects in the St. Louis area included the 1920 Comprehensive Plan, the 1932 Major Street Plan, the Jefferson National Expansion Memorial, and the 1920 Comprehensive Plan for University City. The firm also helped plan the Metro system and the George Washington Parkway, in Washington D.C. In 1984 the firm was purchased by the Parsons Corporation, and its flagship offices were moved from St. Louis to Memphis, Tennessee.
From the description of Collection, 1919-1991. (Washington University in St. Louis). WorldCat record id: 26985708
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associatedWith | Ann Arbor (Mich.) Planning Consultants Reports | person |
associatedWith | Bloomenshine, Helen | person |
associatedWith | Butler University. Fairview Campus. | corporateBody |
associatedWith | Jacot, Henri | person |
associatedWith | Lansing (Mich.). City Planning Commssion. | corporateBody |
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Lansing (Mich.) | |||
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Virginia--Richmond |
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Central business districts |
City planners |
City planning |
City planning |
City planning |
Community development, Urban |
Land subdivision |
Regional planning |
Suburbs |
Urban policy |
Urban renewal |
Zoning |
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Activity |
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Corporate Body
Active 1961
Active 1974
Americans