How the Community Planning Association of Canada Influenced the Development of Planning in Canada, 1946-1964
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Authors
Virginillo, Miranda
Date
2022-04
Type
other
Language
en
Keyword
Community Planning Association of Canada , Urban planning history , Town planning history , Community Planning News , Layout for Living
Alternative Title
Abstract
The Community Planning Association of Canada (CPAC) was influential in the development of Canadian planning and best practices between 1946 and 1964. The Community Planning Association of Canada was formed by Central (now Canada) Mortgage and Housing Corporation (CMHC) from professionals, politicians, and concerned citizens united by a common need to educate and promote community planning in Canada.
This report illustrates the CPAC’s role in the immediate post-war period (between approximately 1946 and 1964) on the Canadian landscape through physical planning and on the planning profession itself. Examination of the national offices financial records shows that the CPAC was largely dependent on funding from CMHC and that the largest expense was for publications and employees. As a result, this report focuses on the publications and the staff of the national office.
Analysis of the actions, actors and interests of the CPAC reveals that the CPAC was interested in three areas in the post-war period. First, the CPAC educated the public on the benefits of good subdivision and community design principles; the strongest tools used to promote these principles were the CPAC’s regular periodicals and special publications, such as Harold Spence-Sales’ How to Subdivide. Second, the CPAC determined that there was an inadequate supply of qualified planning professionals in Canada in the immediate post-war period, and introduced post-secondary educational opportunities to ameliorate this dearth. Third, the CPAC lobbied for better planning education and enabling legislation across Canada.
There are two large scale implications of realizing the CPAC’s role in the development of planning in post-war Canada. First, the CPAC provided tools for the public to advocate for a high standard of community design in the post-war housing boom, generating desire for suburban living. Second, the CPAC and CMHC had an incredibly close relationship during the immediate post-war period with CMHC; as a result, CMHC determined to some extent the planning principles that were encouraged and discouraged in the CPAC’s activities. For better or for worse, the CPAC aided in the proliferation of community planning in Canada in the post-war period.