The Doug Allen Institute
Mission:
For 10,000 years, we fine-tuned the craft of city-building, developing beautiful and inspiring places like Athens, Rome, Paris, and Washington DC. And then we stopped. Our cities are now choked by automobile traffic and air pollution. Our communities are increasingly disconnected both physically and economically. Our lives are separated and segregated by growing commutes. How did we get here?
These problems aren’t confined to large cities, they are found in every small town as well. Without innovative solutions and a deeper understanding of how cities evolve, the problems will only get worse.
Strengthening the public framework of cities through research, planning policy, and urban design.
Here at the Doug Allen Institute, we are tackling the toughest, most pressing issues affecting the health and vitality of the built environment. Today, planning policy and design is driven almost exclusively by land-use and zoning. But this is a major problem because it does not produce an adaptable or walkable framework of streets and blocks. Planning by zoning ignores the lessons of history and ultimately excludes the most important thing that makes a city a city: the public realm.
The great cities and towns we know and love did not start with a zoning map. Great places start with great public frameworks: streets, lots, blocks, and parks. This results in a permanent foundation for growth and evolution—one based on principles of adaptability, walkability, sustainability, economy, and access.
We believe it is time to create exemplary public frameworks again. Through directed research, improved planning policies, and evidence-based urban design, the Doug Allen Institute is changing the way we design our cities.
Our Goals:
Provide students and professionals with educational and financial resources to study cities and their public framework.
Advocate for policy that strengthens the public framework.
Improve cities by conducting research and consulting on planning projects.
Establish a nimble, innovative organization that is financially sustainable.
About Doug Allen
Douglas C. Allen, FASLA, beloved professor and visionary landscape architect, died on October 26, 2014 from brain cancer. Born in 1947 at Emory University Hospital in Atlanta, he grew up in West End and graduated from Brown High School in Atlanta. Doug attended N.C. State University and graduated in 1970 from the University of Georgia with a Bachelor of Landscape Architecture.
In his early career, he worked for Designer’s Collaborative in Athens, Ga., and then in Atlanta, Ga., for William H. Laubmann and Associates. While there, he worked on the Chattahoochee Corridor Study for the Atlanta Regional Commission. In 1973, he continued to work on the Chattahoochee River with the Georgia Dept. of Natural Resources. This work led to the designation of the Chattahoochee as a National Recreational Area.
From 1974-1976, he attended graduate school at Harvard University, earning a Master of Landscape Architecture. He was awarded the ASLA Certificate of Honor for “excellence in the study of landscape architecture.” He briefly returned to the Georgia DNR.
In 1977, he began a 37-year teaching career in the College of Architecture at Georgia Tech, except for the 1987-1988 year as visiting professor of landscape architecture at Harvard University.
Starting in 2002, teaching shifted to administration. He served five years as associate dean for academic affairs, a year as interim dean, and another three years as senior associate dean. Since his retirement in 2011, he returned to the classroom where he did what he loved best, teaching, at that time on a part-time basis. In the fall of 2013, he was honored by election to the Council of Fellows of the American Society of Landscape Architects (FASLA).
Doug made seminal contributions to the field of landscape architecture, particularly to the study of cities and the urban landscape. He published, served on juries, and lectured widely, at universities all over the United States. He served for several years on the editorial board of Places Journal.
He co-founded the study abroad program in Italy. For over 20 years he led this highly popular program until his retirement. He made the past come alive through his thoughtful and vivid lectures. Students from disciplines as varied as engineering and the humanities were profoundly impacted by Doug’s teaching. He brought the impact of the ancients in Rome and environs on their world to the front and center of today’s challenges and opportunities in designing, living, and working in urban environments.
Students and colleagues have shown their esteem for Doug in many ways. One of his proudest moments was winning the ANAK Award in 2006- bestowed annually by a Ga. Tech secret society, to a single professor for contributions to the students of the Institute. He was honored by his former students and colleagues by an endowed lecture in his name. The Douglas C. Allen Lecture invites renowned landscape architects and architects from the U.S. and all over the world to lecture at the College of Architecture at Ga. Tech. In 2013, he was honored by his alma mater, The University of Georgia, with the Distinguished Alumni Medal by the College of Environment and Design. He delivered the commencement address to the CED in May, 2014, at the invitation of Dean Daniel Nadenicek.
Professionally, he practiced landscape architecture for over 40 years, designing and planning commercial, residential, and institutional projects for both public and private sector clients all over the world, from Smyrna, Ga. to Baltimore, Md., and as far away as West Bank, Israel. Former students working in many spheres say they are forever influenced by him in their work.