1. The Plan for Plymouth
- Plymouth before the War
- Victorian city
- The blitz
- Patrick Abercrombie and A Plan for Plymouth
- The Plan described
- Precedents for the Plan
2. Realising the Plan 1945-51 and 1951-62 (the City Centre)
- Abercrombie, William Crabtree and Thomas Tait
- Revisions to the Plan – City Architect and City Engineer
- Roads and ring roads, transport and cars
- Zoning versus mixed uses
- Armada Way and Royal Parade
- First buildings: brick and Portland stone. Opening of Dingles. Thomas Tait and the architecture of mass. The architecture of the 1940s/1950s.
- The completion of the city centre – New George Street to Mayflower Street
- Feature buildings: banks, institutions and the Pannier Market, Guildhall, St. Andrew’s Church. The Civic Centre.
- Changes in materials and composition
- Sculpture and applied art
- Landscape
3. The Abercrombie suburbs
- Housing: Louis de Soissons and Hector Stirling
- Neighbourhood centres
- Open spaces
- Churches and schools
- A38 Parkway and the Tamar bridge
4. Completing the Plan and its significance
- Completion of the Plan 1962-2000
- The significance of the Plan and criticism
- British contemporaries: Coventry, Canterbury, Exeter, Hull etc.
- European contemporaries: Le Havre, Amiens, Rotterdam (Lijnbaan)
5. The Conservation of the Plan
- The survival of the Plan
- The Mackay Vision 2003
- Listed buildings
- Conservation area and issues.
Appendix
Notes
Further reading (bibliography)
Map guide