Somehow my father, an urban planning professor, once obtained the copy of the the 1911 Bogue Plan of Seattle owned by J.W. Maxwell, who served on the Municipal Plans Commission that commissioned Bogue's work. For many years, I have used the plan as a coffee table provocateur. But in the days since the election I took a new look — and saw some messages from history.
The Bogue Plan is a classic “City Beautiful” document of the era, emphasizing the grand boulevards of a Civic Center never achieved, new, numbered highways and rapid transit, parks and port facilities, all premised on “the development of the Civic Idea, old as the human race” — building to accommodate future population. After all, Virgil Bogue was an engineer of some repute and veteran of railroad and port design and construction. For him, the Civic Idea was building, constructing and reshaping, beginning with the “testimonies of the dim ages” which brought us “earth mounds of America and the lithic structures of Stonehenge.”
Nearly 100 years later, we struggle with the legacy of such plans, and how to achieve their unrealized grandeur while remaking their Robert Moses outcomes. Bogue did not mention walkable neighborhoods, compact development, or much green outside of large parks. Many would call the vision bold, yet hardly sustainable.
Still, he left a message — facing the plan’s title page and reproduced below — reminding Seattle always to dream.

Like what you just read? Support high quality local journalism by becoming a member of Crosscut.com today!

Print
Email






Twitter
Facebook
RSS Feeds
Comments:
Posted Tue, Nov 10, 2:23 p.m. Inappropriate
It was just this "City Beautiful" vision that brought together a progressive coalition to throw some blindly pro-development City Council members in Olympia - three new members were elected (and a fourth re-elected but hopefully put on notice that he shall be watched!) for embracing the concept that the original Wilder and White plan for just this concept, preserving views from southern Puget Sound to the State Capital campus as part of W&W;'s original "City Beautiful" concept for Olympia. Pro-development council members in support of high rise rich condos that would have constricted the Isthmus and blocked historic views were ejected from office. So there is some hope!
-dmg