Dr. David Gordon
Professor, FCIP, RPP, AICP, P.Eng.
School of Urban and Regional Planning
Department of Geography and Planning
David Gordon teaches planning history, community design, and urban development at ¾ÅÐãÖ±²¥. He has also taught at the University of Toronto, McGill, Toronto Metropolitan University, Riga, Western Australia, Harvard, MIT, and at the University of Pennsylvania, where he was a Fulbright Scholar. Before becoming a professor, David was a professional planner for over 15 years, as director of an urban design firm and project manager for a Toronto waterfront agency. He is a Fellow of the Canadian Institute of Planners and has shared their National Award of Distinction four times.
David has written widely on urban planning, including the books (2009; Chinese ed. 2011), (2015), and (2021 with Gerald Hodge and Pamela Shaw). His latest research includes histories of Canadian community planning and comparison of Australian, American, and .
Dave was SURP Director from 2008-18; Faculty Coordinator of the for 15 years; and is a founding director of the , where he chairs the . He is the principal editor of the journal, . The National Capital Commission recently appointed him to its . Dave also enjoys celebrating the achievements of SURP alumni across Canada, and helping to plan the redevelopment of the ¾ÅÐãÖ±²¥ campus.
David was born in Ottawa and grew up in Montreal, New Brunswick, and Europe. He lives in Upper Canada's oldest neighbourhood, and is active in community environmental and social service organizations. Dave can often be seen cycling around downtown Kingston with his daughter.
Credentials:
- B.Sc., M.PL. (¾ÅÐãÖ±²¥)
- MBA, D.Des. (Harvard)
- FCIP, RPP, AICP, P.Eng
Links:
Research Interests:
My current major research field, planning history, uses longitudinal studies of planning practice to answer questions about implementation. The main site is Canada's national capital region, which is the focus of the country's longest sustained urban planning effort. The capital city research program was supported by three SSHRC grants and a Fulbright fellowship. The results are reported in a book, many refereed articles and a research website. This research stream culminated in another book, .
A second research focus is planning Canadian suburbs. This area has been addressed in several book chapters, , articles in the Journal of the American Planning Association, Urban History Review, Journal of Architectural and Planning Research and Journal of Urban Design. The project is supported by two SSHRC grants to examine the histories, proportions and policy implications of Canadian suburbs. The research was extended for comparison with Australian suburbs at UWA's and American suburbs at MIT’s .
Teaching and Supervision:
Professor Gordon teaches theories and professional practice with illustrated lectures, case studies, role playing, computer simulations and design workshops. He has been nominated twice for the university’s highest teaching award. Recent courses include:
- GPHY 230 Introduction to Urban and Regional Planning
- GPHY 332 Cities and Planning for Sustainable Development
- SURP 805 Negotiation and Dispute Resolution
- SURP 814 Foundations of Current Planning
- SURP 817 An Intellectual History of Planning
- SURP 824 Urban Planning Project Workshop
- SURP 840 Land Use Planning
Dr. Gordon has supervised over 130 graduate students to completion of their degrees. He is currently seeking Master’s students interested in studentification, Canadian planning histories and community design. Opportunities for doctoral students and post-doctoral fellows will be advertised when funding is available.
Curriculum Vitae (PDF 505kB)