%0 Journal Article %T The Rise and Fall of a Great American City: Gary, Indiana %J Bhumi, The Planning Research Journal %D 2016 %R 10.4038/bhumi.v5i1.21 %X Chlo¨¦ Dotson is an urban planner, sociologist and social environmental activist. She received both her undergraduate and graduate degrees in Urban Planning from Ball State University; her masterˇ®s thesis on Gary, Indiana received the Best Thesis Award. In 2011, she participated in the CapAsia program, the immersive field semester in India and Nepal. In Indianapolis, IN, Milwaukee, WI and Brownsville, TX, Dotson managed and coordinated projects and programming for city management, parks and recreation, housing development services, water and waste water infrastructure, transportation and capital Improvements, and maintains relationships with public and private partners and congressional representatives. While employing a variety of methodologies, Dotson passionately engages residents, community advocates, government officials, and both the public and private sectors in an effort to unite, strengthen, develop, and facilitate holistic and data driven strategies for physical, managerial, social/cultural, economic, environmental, and institutional improvements. Built for permanency, at the dawn of the twentieth century in the United States, Gary, Indiana was considered the - City of the Centuryˇ¬ (Oˇ®Hara, 2011). James Lane (1978) calls it the beacon of American planning. Located in the outskirts of Chicago, on the south shore of Lake Michigan, the city was built at the height of industrialism, within extant American social, cultural, and institutional values and standards. Built from scrap, the capitalist industrial utopia stood for inevitable progress, unrestrained production and capital accumulation, unconstrained growth and expansion, and ever-expanding consumption. Gary, thus, displayed American exceptionalism and the power of the United States %K Gary %K Indiana %U https://bhumi.sljol.info/articles/10.4038/bhumi.v5i1.21/