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503:'s memorial would be "the most moving war memorial ever erected". Clay vigorously defended Lin's design during the initial controversy over the memorial's minimalist design, saying the proposed addition of a realistic statue of Vietnam War era US troops would be "a hell of an intrusion," and that Lin's design "ought to be built and judged. Let the public see what a great work of beauty it is. Once that has happened, I think the public would be in outrage that anything could be foisted on it". Clay later said in March, 1983 "In retrospect, this is what we concluded about Ms. Lin's winning design. It reflected the
514:. Clay said he believed the competition and the building of a memorial commemorating the events of May 4, 1970 would "serve as a catharsis for the university". Clay also said he hoped the Kent State memorial would encourage cities that experienced racial violence to consider memorial competitions so residents might "deal with their collective memories and to acknowledge the sometimes tragic events that took place."
591:, he identified the principles of a group he named the New Urbanists: "We believe in the city, they would say, not in tearing it down. We like open space, but hold that too much of it is just as bad as too little. We want that multiplicity of choice that the city has always offered, but is now in danger of losing," Clay wrote. "I can only say that all great movements start in murmurs and that I can hear murmurs."
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there's really 'No Time for
Ugliness,' it's got to cut both ways; and ugliness committed by members will have to get the same rough treatment as ugliness committed by package dealers and other nonmembers of the AIA Anti-Ugly Club." He also suggested that "the Institute (should) re-examine its rule that prohibits one member from making any public evaluation of the work of another."
189:
house on
Fifteenth Street. Clay explained the neighborhood, with its curvilinear streets was the first major subdivision added to Atlanta's north side that broke with the old rectangular grid of streets, beginning at Fifteenth Street. His mother gardened in Ansley Park which he said also enhanced his
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2008 - Clay was awarded a
Lifetime Achievement Award by the Urban Communication Foundation for his work as "a distinguished urban observer-critic and “extraordinary scholar/journalist who has written about the city for many years... He pioneered the recognition of the inherent connection of design,
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In the 1960s, Clay served as a member of the
Potomac River Basin Task force, providing advice to Department of the Interior Secretary Stewart Udall. In 1965, he served as panel chairman during the White House Conference on Natural Beauty. His presentation at President Johnson's conference discussed
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renamed its real estate section, accurately, "City and
Countryside" and reshaped it. It put the section, not in charge of a salesman who is called an editor but under an urban affairs editor, Grady CIay, and a building editor, Simpson Lawson. If downtown Louisville has developed a clutter of light
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Clay credited his early family experience for his curiosity that made him a successful urban expert. "I was very lucky to grow up in a family with a zestful curiosity about the world. I inherited a lot of that. I had 26 first cousins, the greatest boon a kid could have. They are surrogate brothers
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editors don't hide it from their readers. They put it in a feature, with pictures, on the front page of their City and
Countryside section. If commercial zoning is gobbling too much residential space, they dip into this subject too. Their choice of stories is as wide as the field of urban design.
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Clay also served as an advisor on many land development projects, including the
Environmental Planning Advisory Council for the Amelia Island, Florida developments of the Sea Pines Corporation (1971–1975) and the Review Committee for Williamsburg and Busch properties, for the Kingsmill community
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Western
Mountain Region conference in Santa Fe the fall of 1965, saying "The architectural profession, i.e., that part of it represented by the AIA, will have to continue its efforts to understand and support a quality environment whether its members are in on the deal (get jobs out of it). If
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magazine, editor J. William "Bill" Thompson noted that Clay "once forecast that the design profession with the best information was going to dominate the others – and he wasn't at all sure that landscape architecture had the capacity to generate the best information".
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In 1966–1968, Clay served as a member of the
Advisory Committee on Urban Development, providing advice to Department of Housing and Urban Development Secretary Robert Weaver. Clay served on President Johnson's Task Force on Suburban Problems in 1967–1968.
139:, Clay offered a way to "read" modern American cities, saying “A city is not as we perceive it to be by vision alone, but by insight, memory, movement, emotion and language. A city is also what we call it and becomes as we describe it".
355:, Clay was hired to "shape its four-year program" to "offer fellowships" and "conduct briefings, short courses and seminars on urban problems for working journalists and news executives working on urban affairs".
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Before Clay became editor, most articles had been written by professional landscape architects. During Clay's tenure, many contributions were by writers without architecture credentials. He published
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462:. Clay produced the show to illustrate the forces that cause changes in the urban environment and included examples of how cities handle resources, rubbish and environmental threats.
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507:, the spirit of the place, and went beyond it to echo the national trauma arising from the Vietnam war and its aftermath. It thus became a memorable work of art in itself."
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286:. Its management proceeds from the assumption that the changes around us are too important to be left to the real estate advertisers and their handout men. The
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was one of his favorite neighborhoods and an inspiration for him throughout his life. Growing up in
Atlanta, he lived first on Walker Terrace, a block from
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416:'s ecological planning research, and covered areas that included use of native species for plantings, landscape sculpture and adventure playgrounds.
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587:(CNU) honored Clay with its Athena Medal for his early work in naming and helping define the "New Urbanism" movement. In Clay's 1959 article
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267:, reporting primarily on real estate and "urban affairs", (a post he apparently invented, possibly the first such position in the nation).
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Alleys - Being a disquisition upon the origins, natural disposition and occurrences in the American scene of alleys ... a hidden resource
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in 1916, Clay was the first of Grady Edward (1889–1946) and Eleanor (née Soloman) (1889–1941) Clay Sr.'s two children. Clay grew up in
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2006 - Clay was awarded the Bradford Williams Medal by the American Society of Landscape Architects "to recognize superior writing in
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1959 - Clay was made an honorary member of the American Institute of Architects (AIA) "for articles appearing in national magazines".
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is becoming one of the best known and most widely listened to writers and speakers on the problems of land and the city today".
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1960 - Clay was named a research associate to the Joint Center of Urban Studies at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology.
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In 1958, Clay was one of eight US citizens chosen to take part in the Netherlands' International Seminar on Urban Renewal at
1444:"Off the Beaten Track - Subtitled: Shifting Sands, Sticky Wicket, Fast Track, Outback, Last Ditch, and Armpit of the Nation"
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Off the Beaten Track - Subtitled: Shifting Sands, Sticky Wicket, Fast Track, Outback, Last Ditch, and Armpit of the Nation
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1973 - Clay received a Guggenheim Fellowship for Humanities, US & Canada for Architecture, Planning, & Design.
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Clay suffered an inoperable blood clot in his right leg and died in Louisville, on March 17, 2013, at the age of 96.
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615:. His journals and other papers going back to 1939 are in the archives of the Loeb Library at Harvard.
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He was a founder of the Crescent Hill Community Association, a neighborhood association in Louisville.
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On March 30, 1986, Clay was elected to serve as chair of the selection committee for the design of the
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949:"Correspondents for Kentucky on far-flung fronts are getting news for both army and civilian papers"
370:. Clay also attended the annual congress of the International Federation of Housing and Planning at
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in Louisville. Later promoted to captain, Clay was placed in charge of the Alaska Edition of YANK.
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They dig up examples, contrasts, ideas applicable to their city from other cities and countries."
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In 1966, while discussing real estate sections in US newspapers, Ferdinand Kuhn, a writer for the
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magazine and excellence in writing about landscape architecture in other mainstream periodicals".
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2021 - Clay was honored by having a new luxury hotel in Louisville, The Grady, named after him.
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In his role as an urban affairs observer and reporter, Clay spoke of the popular press at an
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to help establish its new Urban Journalism Center. Financed by a $ 1,092,000 grant from the
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1999 - Clay was awarded the Olmsted Medal by the American Society of Landscape Architects.
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network. The documentary featured footage of five American cities as an introduction to
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In the 1990s, Clay recorded several commentaries for public radio, in a series titled
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1958 - Clay was elected president of the National Association of Real Estate Editors.
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1223:"The Career of Gary Robinette in the Contemporary History of Landscape Architecture"
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Clay also served as president of the National Association of Real Estate Editors.
282:: "Of the papers I have seen, the outstanding one in the field is the Louisville
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In 1981, Clay served as chair of the selection committee for the design of the
329:, accurately predicting the damage that would be caused by the construction of
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Returning to Louisville in 1949, Clay continued to work as a reporter for the
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to the then-successful shoe district on Louisville's East Market Street.
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1453:. Cambridge, Massachusetts: The President and Fellows of Harvard College
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1412:"51-room boutique hotel set to open in downtown Louisville this spring"
871:"Grady Clay - A Georgia Native Talks About is Life in Landscape Design"
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Clay's expertise and opinions were sought across the US and the world.
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in 1942, he became the distribution officer of the European Edition of
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1256:. Washington, D.C.: The American Institute of Architects. August 1982
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Real Places: An Unconventional Guide to America's Generic Landscape
431:, among others, which he hoped would spur his readers into action.
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Upon resigning from the Louisville newspapers in 1966, Clay joined
788:"U.S. WWII Draft Cards Young Men, 1940-1947 for Grady Edward Clay"
657:(as editor), 193 pages, McGraw-Hill Education (February 1, 1979),
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1986 - Clay was awarded an honorary doctorate by Emory University.
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at Stuart A. Rose Manuscript, Archives, and Rare Book Library
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From 1960 to 1984, Clay was the editor of the then quarterly
1283:. Louisville, Kentucky: The American Institute of Architects
1153:"The White House Conference on Natural Beauty Full Pamphlet"
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architecture, quality of life and communication technology".
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1947 - Clay was named a Nieman Fellow at Harvard University.
1247:"Viet Memorial Designer, AJA Strongly Denounce Alterations"
670:, 241 pages, American Planning Association (October 1987),
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Clay's appreciation of urban design started early. He said
1133:. Atlanta, Georgia: The Chi Phi Fraternity. February 1959
690:. 322 p., 100 halftones, 16 line drawings. 8½ × 9¼ 1994,
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Right Before Your Eyes: Penetrating the Urban Environment
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1974, The University of Chicago Press, ISBN 9780226109459
739:. Washington, D.C.: The American Institute of Architects
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Most of Clay's professional papers were donated to the
202:. After earning his master's degree in journalism from
1324:"Memorial Design Selected to Honor Kent State Victims"
216:. His first job as a reporter there paid $ 25 a week.
622:(as contributor) an essay in William H. Whyte's book
1174:"Townscape & Landscape: The Coming Battleground"
454:, a television documentary broadcast in 1982 on the
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Clay was considered one of the first authorities on
109:(November 5, 1916 – March 17, 2013) was an American
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764:"Noted Journalist, Urbanist Grady Clay Dead at 96"
291:poles, signs and other ugly street furniture, the
1369:"Rewarding Research about Communication Patterns"
1003:"Ferdinand Kuhn, Writer, Ex-Diplomatic Reporter"
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386:development project in Williamsburg, Virginia.
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469:. The segments aired locally on Louisville's
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877:. Athens, Georgia: The University of Georgia
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487:Monument design competition chair and juror
276:, wrote in the Summer 1966 edition of the
1098:"Grady Clay Will Join Northwestern Center"
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423:magazine with tough, critical stories on
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643:Close-Up: How to Read the American City,
552:American Society of Landscape Architects
550:Clay was made an honorary member of the
403:American Society of Landscape Architects
319:. For example, in 1961 he was quoted in
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521:on River Road in Louisville, Kentucky.
419:Clay regularly filled the pages of the
405:. It is the magazine of record for the
338:American Institutes of Architects (AIA)
326:Death and Life of Great American Cities
137:Close-Up: How to Read the American City
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558:American Society of Planning Officials
955:. Louisville, Kentucky. April 9, 1944
841:"Grady Clay: He Switched Hats Easily"
452:Unknown Places: Exploring the Obvious
210:in 1939 for a job interview with the
198:Clay earned a bachelor's degree from
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1104:. Louisville, Kentucky. May 16, 1966
815:. Birmingham, Alabama. July 12, 1946
979:Isenstadt, Sandy (November 2015).
639:, an essay, Horizon Magazine, 1959
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1527:Writers from Louisville, Kentucky
1001:Smith, J. Y. (October 18, 1978).
434:In an article from the July 2006
1410:Tobin, Ben (February 26, 2021).
517:Clay was a design juror for the
126:American Institute of Architects
651:59 pages, 1978, ASIN B0006CY1F2
456:Kentucky Educational Television
227:, due to his experience as the
839:Barry Jacobs (July 15, 1973).
219:Enlisting in the U.S. Army at
185:. Later his family moved to a
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1512:American landscape architects
1482:Archives & Records Center
585:Congress for the New Urbanism
409:profession in North America.
401:magazine, the journal of the
171:and sisters and confidants".
128:said of Clay: "The editor of
113:and urbanist specializing in
1476:Grady Clay Papers, 1937-1999
730:"Rx Surveillance and Review"
618:Clay's authorship includes:
473:public radio station during
248:and spent the year studying
240:In 1948, Clay was awarded a
167:and Grady Clay Eye clinics.
1547:United States Army officers
1442:Clay, Grady (Summer 1988).
1303:"May 4 Memorial Chronology"
728:Clay, Grady (August 1962).
701:Crossing the American Grain
467:Crossing the American Grain
427:; pending legislation; and
349:Medill School of Journalism
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1275:Clay, Grady (March 1983).
875:Georgia Landscape Magazine
684:; an essay, Nieman Reports
279:Columbia Journalism Review
1537:Journalists from Kentucky
1517:American male journalists
928:"In Memoriam: Grady Clay"
493:Vietnam Veterans Memorial
378:"Water and Waterfronts".
346:Northwestern University's
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1480:University of Louisville
624:The Exploding Metropolis
613:University of Louisville
450:Clay wrote and produced
1039:"Comment & Opinion"
869:Tufts, Melissa (2009).
655:Water and the Landscape
519:Patriots Peace Memorial
1532:Courier Journal people
1281:Landscape Architecture
904:"Grady Edward Clay Jr"
847:. Louisville, Kentucky
574:Landscape Architecture
436:Landscape Architecture
421:Landscape Architecture
407:landscape architecture
399:Landscape Architecture
391:Landscape Architecture
231:picture editor at the
206:, Clay hitch-hiked to
130:Landscape Architecture
115:landscape architecture
1348:"Honors & Awards"
981:"Metropolis Regained"
809:"Dr. Grady Clay Dies"
475:National Public Radio
44:Grady Edward Clay, Jr
1522:Writers from Atlanta
1124:"Real Estate Editor"
525:Community activities
264:The Louisville Times
208:Louisville, Kentucky
107:Grady Edward Clay Jr
77:Louisville, Kentucky
1201:"Grady Clay papers"
1131:The Chi Phi Chakett
1102:The Courier Journal
1068:"Grady Clay papers"
953:The Courier Journal
845:The Courier Journal
813:The Birmingham News
637:Metropolis Regained
589:Metropolis Regained
512:Kent State Memorial
499:predicted designer
497:James J. Kilpatrick
311:Urban design career
204:Columbia University
58:Ann Arbor, Michigan
16:American journalist
246:Harvard University
244:for Journalism at
1486:Grady Clay Papers
709:978-1-884532-51-1
696:978-0-226-10946-6
676:978-0-918286-47-5
663:978-0-07-036190-4
359:Expert consultant
242:Nieman Fellowship
190:sense of design.
135:In his 1974 book
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1507:2013 deaths
1502:1916 births
1206:October 14,
583:2009 - The
505:genius loci
321:Jane Jacobs
229:rotogravure
179:Ansley Park
85:Occupations
1496:Categories
1457:August 10,
1427:January 6,
1287:August 10,
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715:References
460:urbanology
414:Ian McHarg
323:' seminal
143:Early life
111:journalist
91:Journalist
50:1916-11-05
25:Grady Clay
1478:from the
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1015:0190-8286
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933:August 8,
909:August 8,
851:August 8,
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769:August 9,
368:The Hague
307:in 1966.
221:Fort Knox
187:Neel Reid
176:Atlanta's
149:Ann Arbor
501:Maya Lin
393:magazine
153:Michigan
147:Born in
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1020:May 15,
793:July 7,
680:1988 -
429:ecology
161:Georgia
157:Atlanta
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533:Honors
94:Author
79:, U.S.
60:, U.S.
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599:Death
1459:2020
1429:2024
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1011:ISSN
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