Lewis Keeble
Lewis Bingham Keeble, MC (1 January 1915 – 13 November 1994) was a British and Australian town planner, who became Professor of Regional and Town Planning at the University of Queensland, Australia.
Life and career
[edit]He was born in Lewisham, London, and started work as a Planning Officer in local government in the UK. He also taught part-time. In 1950 he began full-time teaching at the University of Manchester[1] then in 1955 moved to the University of London. While there he wrote one of his well-known early books, Town planning at the crossroads.[2] He was elected President of the Royal Town Planning Institute (1965–66)[3] and later National President of the Royal Australian Planning Institute (1972–74)[4] (now the Planning Institute Australia).
He arrived in Brisbane, Australia, in 1968 to teach town planning subjects in the University of Queensland's Department of Architecture. He was appointed to a Personal Chair in 1970, then became the first Professor of the new Department of Regional and Town Planning in 1971. His inaugural lecture was called The Australian Planner's Dilemma[5] but he was perhaps better known for his massive and detailed textbook on planning called Principles and Practice of Town and Country Planning.[6] He completed his doctoral thesis[7] in 1973. He was active in the Australian Institute of Urban Studies but left Australia with his wife, Betty Trevena, to return to Oxford in 1979 where they set up a town planning consultancy. Keeble's experience during this later period led to two additional publications, Town planning made plain[8] and Fighting planning appeals.[9]
He died in Oxford on 13 November 1994.[10]
References
[edit]- ^ Keeble, Lewis (1979) The teaching of town planning and the government of universities, Queensland Planner, 19(2), pp. 4-10
- ^ Keeble, Lewis (1961) Town planning at the crossroads, Estates Gazette, London
- ^ "RTPI Past Presidents". rtpi.org.uk. Retrieved 8 July 2016.
- ^ Wright, Bruce (2001). Expectations of a better world: Planning Australian communities. Canberra: Royal Australian Planning Institute. p. 89. ISBN 0909258090.
- ^ Keeble, Lewis (1971) The Australian Planner's Dilemma, University of Queensland Press, Brisbane
- ^ Keeble, Lewis (1951) Principles and Practice of Town and Country Planning, The Estates Gazette, London
- ^ The design of residential areas at low densities and with high motor vehicle use, PhD, School of Geography Planning and Architecture, University of Queensland
- ^ Keeble, Lewis (1983) Town planning made plain, Construction Press, London
- ^ Keeble, Lewis (1985) Fighting planning appeals, Construction Press, London
- ^ Day, Phil (1994) Obituary: Defender of Town Planning, The Australian, 29 November 1994