Noted Milwaukee Urban Planner Lawrence Witzling Receives Pioneer Award from the American Planning Association
The Pioneer Award recognizes individuals or organizations that have made significant contributions that have reshaped planning practice, education or theory
CHICAGO – Urban planning expert and educator Lawrence P. Witzling, PhD, has received the American Planning Association’s 2017 National Excellence Award for Planning Pioneers. For more than 40 years, Witzling has been a national authority on urban planning and design, inspiring hundreds of students and aspiring professionals to produce innovative, high-quality urban design.
APA’s National Planning Excellence Award for Planning Pioneers recognizes the contributions of individuals, planning organizations or firms that have made personal and direct innovations in the American planning profession that have significantly and positively redirected planning practice education and theory with long-term results. Nominees are judged based on their historical impact on the planning industry and their national significance.
Rocky Marcoux, Commissioner of Milwaukee’s Department of City Development described Witzling “As an integral and well-respected urban planner and designer, the community has come to rely on him as a trusted thought leader and steward of quality development.”
He served as the design competition advisor for key civic projects nationwide, including Pittsburgh’s Convention Center, Evanston’s Library, the Astronaut’s Memorial (Cape Canaveral), housing in Seattle’s Denny Regrade, Milwaukee’s Menomonee Valley, Atlanta’s Peachtree and Auburn Streets, Leesburg’s Town Hall, and the World Trade Center Memorial. All of these competitions led to implementation of award-winning, innovative designs. Through these competitions, planning professionals were challenged to showcase their most innovative work.
In 1988 he started his own practice, Planning and Design Institute which grew and then merged into GRAEF in 2008. He has overseen numerous award-winning urban design projects throughout Wisconsin and helped pioneer innovative development concepts. This includes award-winning work on Milwaukee’s lakefront, removal and redevelopment of Milwaukee’s Park East freeway, riverfront development, urban reindustrialization, and more than 50 neighborhood, downtown, and comprehensive plans throughout Wisconsin.
As a professor at the University of Wisconsin-Milwaukee from 1973 to 2014, he brought realworld scenarios to the classroom so students could exercise their skills as thinkers, planners and designers. He helped found UWM’s planning department as well as its joint professional program with architecture.
As a mentor, he shared his passion for planning and urban design with those he coached and supervised, and encouraged aspiring professionals to further their education in planning and pursue new skills and civic leadership.
Witzling wrote more than 20 feature articles about planning, urban design and architecture, and he co-authored two books, “Presenting Statistics” and “The Planning and Administration of Design Competitions.” Witzling continues to be active in the profession as an educator, speaker, mentor and community activist, pushing the boundaries of excellence in urban design.
“Lawrence Witzling has made significant and lasting contributions to the field of planning,” said Shedrick Coleman, AIA, Chair of APA’s 2017 National Planning Awards Jury. “His work has reshaped cities all over this country, but more importantly, also reshaped the way people think and approach efforts to create more livable and vibrant communities today.”
APA’s national awards program – the profession’s highest honor – is a proud tradition established more than 50 years ago to recognize outstanding community plans, planning programs and initiatives, public education efforts and individuals for their leadership on planning issues.
The 2017 APA National Planning Award recipients will be honored at a special luncheon on Monday, May 8, 2017, during APA’s National Planning Conference in New York City. The award winners will also be featured in the May issue of Planning magazine.
For a complete list of the APA 2017 National Planning and Excellence and Achievement Award recipients, visit www.planning.org/awards.
The American Planning Association is an independent, not- for-profit educational organization that provides leadership in the development of vital communities. APA and its professional institute, the American Institute of Certified Planners, are dedicated to advancing the art, science and profession of good planning — physical, economic and social — so as to create communities that offer better choices for where and how people work and live. The nearly 37,000 members of APA help create communities of lasting value and encourage civic leaders, business interests and citizens to play a meaningful role in creating communities that enrich people’s lives. APA has offices in Washington, D.C., and Chicago. For more information, visit www.planning.org.
NOTE: This press release was submitted to Urban Milwaukee and was not written by an Urban Milwaukee writer. While it is believed to be reliable, Urban Milwaukee does not guarantee its accuracy or completeness.
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Congratulations Professor. Thank you for your decades of service to students and the profession.
LARRY…..CONGRATULATIONS…………….AS ONE OF YOUR EARLY COLLEAGUES I WOULD LIKE TO BELIEVE THERE WAS SOMETHING SPECIAL ABOUT OUR IDEAS RELATIVE TO OUR COMMITMENTS TO THE LOCAL COMMUNITY, PROGRESSIVE AND PARTICIPATORY MODELS OF DESIGN WITH CLIENTS AND RESIDENTS KEY TO THE SUCCESS OF OUR CONTRIBUTIONS TO DESIGNING URBAN AND RELATED NEIGHBORHOOD ENVIRONMENTS…….OUR COLLEAGUE BOB…. WERE HE HERE……WOULD BE PLEASED WITH YOUR AWARD….BEST REGARDS ED jj OLSON
I commend you on your award, Mr Witzling but I think you’re off the mark on your plan in Wauwatosa…if you were to support a plan of “NO NEW DEVELOPMET” and lobby the County on this issue, then I would feel you are sharing the values of our community. “. The APA mission statelment …”so as to create communities that offer better choices for where and how people work and live. The nearly 37,000 members of APA help create communities of lasting value and encourage civic leaders, business interests and citizens to play a meaningful role in creating communities that enrich people’s lives.”
I do not think developing the County Grounds will enrich our lives…