The Transformation of the Battery Park Landscape
in Asheville, North Carolina: 1900-1930 (2008)
Directed by Jo Ramsay Leimenstoll. 65 pp.
This research deals with the urban development of Asheville,
North Carolina in the first half of the twentieth century
and, specifically, the transformation of an urban hillside
known as Battery Park. It is a case study of how one person
and his beliefs about technology, modernization, and commercial
appeal had the power to forever change the city’s form.
In a very short time period, E.W. Grove transformed a bucolic
twenty-five- acre Battery Hill with a rambling Victorian
hotel into a flattened automobile-centered commercial district
with two skyscraper hotels. During this period, Grove concentrated
his financial investments in this area, and worked diligently
through many channels to ensure their success. Focusing on
the time frame of 1900 to 1930, this investigation covers
the Battery Park changes by combining three methods: the
careful study of the existing landscape, historic visual
analysis, and the use of traditional archival evidence. The
ultimate goal of the project is to address the Battery Park
landscape as a physical representation of the changing values
in Asheville’s history. The research traces the physical,
functional, and technological evolution of this urban landscape
and relates these
changes to national, regional, and local history. It examines
why certain values in Asheville took precedence over others
and whether certain themes, such as transportation, were
major influences.
View complete thesis at :http://libres.uncg.edu/ir/uncg/f/umi-uncg-1592.pdf |
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