Sneha Girap (Editor)

Dolores Hayden

Updated on
Edit
Like
Comment
Share on FacebookTweet on TwitterShare on LinkedInShare on Reddit
Occupation
  
Professor

Role
  
Professor

Name
  
Dolores Hayden

Genre
  
Architecture

Nationality
  
United States


Dolores Hayden smiling while wearing a turtle-neck blouse

Education
  
Harvard Graduate School of Design (1972), Girton College, Cambridge (1967), Mount Holyoke College (1966)

Awards
  
Guggenheim Fellowship for Humanities, US & Canada

Books
  
The Power of Place: Urban La, Building Suburbia: Green Fie, The Grand Domestic Revolutio, A Field Guide to Sprawl, Redesigning the American

Similar People
  
Reyner Banham, Kevin Starr, Thomas Hines, Julius Shulman, Esther McCoy

Dolores hayden building suburbia


Dolores Hayden is an American professor, urban Historian, architect, author, and poet.

Contents

Dolores Hayden smiling while wearing a green blouse, eyeglasses and necklace

Dolores hayden yale grand domestic revolution


Background

Dolores Hayden smiling with a flower on her side while wearing a blouse and eyeglasses

Hayden received her B.A. in architecture from Mount Holyoke College in 1966. She also studied at Cambridge University and the Harvard Graduate School of Design where she obtained a professional degree. She is the widow of sociologist and novelist, Peter H. Marris and is the mother of Laura Hayden Marris.

Career

Dolores Hayden giving a speech while wearing a gray sweatshirt and blue scarf

Since 1973, Hayden has traveled to MIT, UC Berkeley, UCLA, and Yale to hold lectures about architecture, landscape architecture, urban planning, and American studies.

Dolores Hayden smiling while wearing a green blouse and eyeglasses

She founded a Los Angeles-based non-profit arts and humanities group called The Power of Place which was active from 1984 to 1991. The goal of the organization was to, "celebrate the historic landscape of the center of the city and its ethnic diversity. Under her direction, collaborative projects on an African American midwife's homestead, a Latina garment workers' union headquarters, and Japanese-American flower fields engaged citizens, historians, artists, and designers in examining and commemorating the working lives of ordinary citizens." [1] This is documented in the text, The Power of Place: Urban Landscapes as Public History.

Awards

  • American Library Association Notable Book
  • Award for Excellence in Design Research from the National Endowment for the Arts
  • Paul Davidoff Award for an outstanding book in Urban Planning from the ACSP
  • Diana Donald Award for feminist scholarship from the American Planning Association
  • References

    Dolores Hayden Wikipedia