Background
Williams, Norman was born on December 26, 1915 in Chicago, Illinois, United States. Son of Norman and Joan (Chalmers) Williams.
( The Center for Urban Policy Research takes pride in pr...)
The Center for Urban Policy Research takes pride in presenting this book. In our opinion learning from its example is of first priority. The Vermont town at its best is an ideal vision for much of the country. It is a living artifact—appealing to our sense of history and of place. Long in the making and often at risk, the harmony of plan, structure and setting has rarely been matched. This work is devoted to exploring the reality of the towns—how they came to be. It illustrates their successes and those that fell by the road—sometimes literally. The authors blend their broad range of experience in land use law, history, and architecture to provide insight of use and interest not only to "Vermonters," but all who work for better communities. The issues of aesthetic strictures versus private prosperity are complex; their successful resolution, however, is an enormously important prize. This book not only illustrates the issues and results— both good and bad—but also details guidance. As America's suburbs "thicken" in function and density, the virtues in life-style which they once embodied are endangered. The small towns of exurbia are now in the embrace of super highways and development. How do we learn from the past—not to simply replicate it, but rather to secure guidelines to a successful future? Design control and legal considerations are given special chapters to serve as a guide for future actions relevant to every community. In addition, Professor Wilhelm V. von Moltke has contributed a separate section on town plans. And all of this serves to enhance the meaning and importance of the many illustrations, The book is recommended to the practitioner and non-practitioner alike for sheer pleasure and insight.
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Williams, Norman was born on December 26, 1915 in Chicago, Illinois, United States. Son of Norman and Joan (Chalmers) Williams.
Bachelor, Yale University, 1938; Bachelor of Laws, Yale University, 1943; postgraduate, Corpus Christi College, Cambridge, 1938-1939; postgraduate, Yale University, 1939-1940.
Practice, New York City, 1943-1948. Senior analyst The Plan for Rezoning New York, 1948-1950. From acting director to director division of planning, acting chief to chief office of master planning New York City Department of Planning, 1950-1960.
Consultant Outdoor Recreation Resources Review Commission, 1961. Director Guyana Project Joint Center for Urban Studies, Caracas, Venezuela, 1961-1962. Executive director Governor's advisory commission on transportation State of New Jersey, 1964-1965.
Member, vice chairman Princeton (New Jersey) Borough Planning Board and Princeton Regional Planning Board, 1965-1975. Professor Vermont Law School, 1976-1996. Professor urban planning and law University Arizona, 1978-1986.
Visiting lecturer city planning Columbia University Architecture School, 1951-1961, Yale University Architecture School, 1952-1961. Visiting professor city planning Massachusetts Institute of Technology, 1960, University Virginia, 1973. Visiting professor law Rutgers-Newark University, 1965-1975, University Arizona, 1976-1978, 87-91, Vermont Law School, 1975.
Professor urban planning Rutgers University, 1969-1975.
( The Center for Urban Policy Research takes pride in pr...)
President Citizens Housing and Planning Council New York, New York City, 1950. Member Billings Park Commission, Woodstock, Vermont, 1985-1992. Member American Planning Association (Distinguished Leadership award 1991), American Institute of Consultant Planners.
Clubs: Yale (New York City). Lakota (Barnard, Vermont) (board directors 1977-1980, 82-85), Elizabethan, Yale University (board governors 1937-1938).
Married Jeanne Tedesche, November 27, 1947. Children: Norman Junior, Joan Chalmers, Roger Sidney, Sarah Dorothy.