Urban Renewal as Violence: Documenting the Erasure of Wooster Square

Master of Architecture Thesis
University of Waterloo
Published April 2023

Abstract

In American urban development, a defining period known as the urban renewal era took place in the decades after the Second World War. Many cities in the United States experienced a new interest in addressing urban decay; laws such as the 1949 Housing Act facilitated the movement. Municipalities had the capability to demolish areas that they labelled as ‘slums’ or ‘blighted’ in order to build new, attractive urban fabric and infrastructure. Although perhaps rooted in an optimistic and utopian vision of the future city, urban renewal projects had significant flaws—namely that the areas targeted for demolition disproportionately belonged to marginalized communities.

In New Haven, Connecticut, the historic neighbourhood of Wooster Square was subject to an urban renewal scheme that included both rehabilitation of existing buildings, and complete redevelopment. Further, a new Interstate highway was situated through the centre of the neighbourhood, designed to sever Wooster Square into two distinct areas. This thesis explores the motivations and impact of Wooster Square’s renewal, both on the urban fabric itself, as well as on the neighbourhood’s Italian, immigrant and working class community. Through a series of ten illustrations that draw knowledge from archival sources such as photographs and oral histories, the thesis visualizes Wooster Square before and after renewal. In doing so, the thesis documents the destructive nature of the urban renewal approach and the violence that it inflicted on one of New Haven’s most marginalized groups.

Awards

National

Royal Architectural Institute of Canada Student Medal

Awarded annually to a student graduating from a professional degree program in each School of Architecture in Canada who, in the judgment of the faculty of the respective School, has achieved the highest level of academic excellence and/or has completed the outstanding final thesis for that academic year.

Royal Architectural Institute of Canada Honour Roll

Awarded to the top four students who have achieved high academic standing in the top 10% of their graduating class.

Canada Graduate Scholarship - Masters (CGS-M), Social Sciences and Humanities Research Council of Canada

Provides financial support to high-caliber scholars who are engaged in eligible master’s in Canada

Institutional

Urban Strategies Inc Award

Awarded by Urban Strategies Inc and the University of Waterloo to a graduate student whose architectural thesis best exemplifies excellence in Urban Design

University of Waterloo Commended Thesis

Awarded to top ranked March theses from the previous academic year

University of Waterloo President’s Graduate Scholarship

Awarded to outstanding graduate students who hold certain major federally and provincially funded competition-based scholarships

Provincial

Ontario Graduate Scholarship / Queen Elizabeth II Graduate Scholarship in Science & Technology (QEII-GSST)*

*Offered in name only, as the award cannot be held concurrently with the CGS-M scholarship

The OGS and QEII-GSST programs provide merit-based funding to full-time students at the master’s and doctoral levels.