Landscape Architecture Aotearoa Issue 2 Issue 2 | Page 52

52 LANDSCAPE ARCGITECTURE AOTEAROA Waitangi Hotel, Northland, 1970. G. Reithmaier photographer. R24803608 ANZ,W.sam A welcome guest This British-born planner was quick to recognise and influence New Zealand’s potential as a tourist destination. Text by John Adam HISTORIANS OF URBAN DESIGN, CONSERVATION AND tourism have overlooked one of the more influential and regular visitors to New Zealand, Professor Arthur G. Ling (1913-1996). Ling made several visits over the period of 1964 to 1976. During each visit he presented keynote papers to the Urban Development Association of NZ , a Wellington-based pressure group that functioned from 1963 to 1976. Ling had a major part in the foundation of this public forum, which published a quarterly glossy magazine called ‘Town & Country’ and was chaired by architect Frank W. Ponder (1916-2015). More significantly, Ling undertook reports for three New Zealand government Cabinet Ministers of Tourism, the Rt. Hons. Dean Eyre, David Spence Thomson and Harry Lapwood. The three NZ government reports were titled Planning and Development of Tourist Areas (1964); Planning and Administrative Problems of Tourist Parks and Regions in New Zealand (1969) and Tourist Development Report (February, 1976). Keynote papers from Ling’s 1964 and 1976 visits were titled, respectively: What can be achieved in confined urban development; and Planning: city centres, regions, and public participation. Who was Arthur G. Ling? He was British-born Communist planner who studied under Sir Patrick Abercrombie in London, and was influenced by the Russian urban planner Nicolay A. Milyutin, who is best-known for the linear city. Ling visited Russia in 1939 and wrote reports on Warsaw and Moscow in the 1950s. As a founding member of the Modern Architectural Research (MARS) Group he jointly published a paper ‘A Master Plan for London’ (with Canadian born landscape architect, Christopher Tunnard (1910-1979) etal) in the Architectural Review in 1942. By 1945 Ling was the head of the town planning section of Architects Dept. for London County Council and he features in the notable film ‘Proud City, 1946’. Ling designed Runcorn New Town in England in 1964