![]() ![]() ![]() Furthermore, this action would result in better housing, more open space, more efficient transportation systems, and, in the end, healthier and safer communities. Specifically, he believed knowledge should guide action. He grew highly skeptical of the one-sizefits-all stylistic palette of modernism, instead remaining committed to the ideals of modernism. Influenced by his mentor Lewis Mumford, McHarg began to move away from the aesthetic dogma of the international style. ![]() At first, this practice was grounded in the modernist principles McHarg had learned at Harvard. His most important contributions derived from this reflective academic practice. There, McHarg fused his desire to practice with a new-found love for teaching. Holmes Perkins enticed him to build a new graduate program in landscape architecture at the University of Pennsylvania. McHarg worked on housing and new town programs in Scotland and experienced a near-deadly bout with tuberculosis before Dean G. He left Harvard with the intent to help rebuild his war-ravaged homeland. After the war, Ian McHarg, "the major" as he was called then, marinated in modernism at Harvard. Before the war, he was a child of the Great Depression in industrial Glasgow, Scotland. He left military service after the war as a confident major in command of one of Britain's most elite combat units. He entered the Second World War as a lanky teenage private. Ian Lennox McHarg (1920–2001) experienced the transition between adolescence and manhood as a warrior. ![]()
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