Charlotte architect one of ‘Greatest Urban Thinkers’

The late Jane Jacobs leads the vote so far with at least 660, but Lewis Mumford (270) and Kevin A. Lynch (281) are virtually neck and neck. The horse race? An online contest by the Web site Planetizen.com for Greatest Urban Thinker. Here’s a link.

I was cheered to see Charlotte architect Terry Shook (below) on the list, though rather far down it, with 7 votes last I looked. S.C.-based developer Vince Graham is also on the list, with 5 votes.

It’s an interesting list and provocative intellectual exercise, because you have to ponder whether some of the anti-urbanists, such as New York’s Robert Moses and Le Corbusier, were more influential than urbanists such as Mumford and Jacobs.

The Planetizen gang decided to leave a bit muddy the issue of whether “influential” should mean “brilliant thinker about cities” or “had the biggest impact.” Here’s what they say:

“What about Le Corbusier, who remains an influential figure in architecture but has been labeled Enemy Number One by urban planners? Like Time Magazine, we’ve left the definition deliberately vague to encompass those who’ve had the most influence on the way we think about cities and/or how cities are shaped, for better or for worse. “

I e-mailed Shook (a UNC Charlotte alum) to alert him to his appearance in company of Mumford, Lynch, Daniel Burnham and other Big Names. He replied: ” Really? … Any idea on how I got on there?” (Which I’m pretty sure means he wasn’t voting for himself … )

You can vote for up to 15. Have at it.
One last note: If you’re interested in reading about how Jane Jacobs and Robert Moses fought one another in New York over a series of urban redevelopment projects (Jacobs won the battles) look for “Wrestling With Moses,” by Anthony Flint of the Lincoln Institute of Land Policy. I’ve read it; it’s well-researched, well-written and quite entertaining.