The localities in the following lists have been developed directly as garden cities or their development has been heavily influenced by the garden city movement. Detailed information is collected and provided by World Garden Cities, a knowledge platform created by Museum Het Schip in Amsterdam, the Netherlands.
Africa
Morocco
South Africa
- Edgemead, Milnerton[1]
- Pinehurst, Durbanville, Western Cape
- Pinelands, Cape Town
Asia
Armenia
Hong Kong
Indonesia
Israel
Japan
Pakistan
Russia
Singapore
Vietnam
Europe
Czechia
Finland
France
- Garden City, Suresnes, designed by Alexandre Maistrasse, Julien Quoniam, and Félix Dumail
- Garden City (in French), Stains, designed by Eugène Gonnot and Georges Albenque
- Garden City (in French), Pré-Saint-Gervais, designed by Félix Dumail
Germany
Hungary
Ireland
Italy
- Città Giardino Aniene (later Monte Sacro), Rome
- Garbatella, Rome
Latvia
Lithuania
Netherlands
Norway
Poland
Portugal
Russia
Slovakia
Slovenia
Spain
United Kingdom
England
- Bedford Park, London
- Bournville Village, Birmingham
- Brentham Garden Suburb, London
- Hampstead Garden Suburb, London
- Letchworth Garden City, Hertfordshire
- Manor, Sheffield, South Yorkshire
- Moor Pool, Birmingham
- Milton Keynes, Buckinghamshire
- Penkhull Garden Village, Stoke-on-Trent
- St Helier, London
- Telford, Shropshire
- The Garden Village, Kingston upon Hull, Yorkshire
- Welwyn Garden City, Hertfordshire
- Wythenshawe, Manchester
Scotland
Wales
North America
Canada
- Grand Falls-Windsor, Newfoundland and Labrador (1905)
- Prince Rupert, British Columbia (1910)
- Town of Mount Royal, Quebec (1912)
- Gardenvale Neighbourhood, Sainte-Anne-de-Bellevue, Quebec, (ca. 1918)
- Kapuskasing, Ontario (1921)
- Corner Brook, Newfoundland and Labrador (1923)
- Cité-jardin du Tricentenaire (Tricentennial Garden-City), Montreal, Quebec (1940–1947),
- Kitimat, British Columbia (1951)
United States
- Augusta, Georgia (1900)[3]
- Forest Hills, Queens, New York City, New York (start date 1908)
- Jackson Heights, New York City
- Forest Hills, Boston (1911)
- Park Circle, North Charleston, South Carolina (ca. 1912)
- Narbrook Park, Narberth, Pennsylvania (c. 1915)
- Fairview, Camden, New Jersey (1918)
- Mariemont, Ohio (1923)
- Sunnyside Gardens Historic District, Queens, New York City, New York (1920s)
- Radburn, New Jersey (1929)
- Three New Deal Greenbelt communities:
- Chatham Village, Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania (1930s)
- Wyvernwood Garden Apartments, Los Angeles, California (1939)
- Wilshire Village, Houston, Texas (1940, demolished 2009)
- Baldwin Hills Village, Los Angeles, California (1941)
- Epcot, Bay Lake, Florida (1960s)
- Village Homes, Davis, California (1960s)
- Reston, Virginia (1964)
- Paloma Del Sol, Temecula, California (1992)
Oceania
Australia
- Haberfield, New South Wales, Sydney, New South Wales (1901)
- Daceyville (Dacey Garden Suburb), New South Wales, Sydney, New South Wales (1912)
- Colonel Light Gardens, Adelaide, South Australia (1915)
- Garden City, Victoria, in inner bayside Melbourne, Victoria (1926)
- Peter Lalor Housing Estate, Lalor, Victoria
- The Sunshine Estate, Sunshine, Victoria
- Canberra, the Australian Capital Territory (1913)
- Wundowie, Western Australia (1947)
New Zealand
South America
Argentina
Brazil
Chile
References
- ↑ "Over 90 years of community building". Garden Cities Company. Archived from the original on 24 September 2014. Retrieved 14 October 2014.
- ↑ Bugaev, Roman; Mikhail Piskunov; Timofey Rakov (November 2021). "Footpaths of the Late-Soviet Environmental Turn: The "Forest City" of Novosibirsk's Akademgorodok as a Sociotechnical Imaginary". Soviet and Post-Soviet Review. 48 (3): 289–313.
- ↑ J. Mark Souther (May 2021). ""Making 'The Garden City of the South': Beautification, Preservation, and Downtown Planning in Augusta, Georgia". Journal of Planning History. 20 (2): 87–116 – via Cleveland State University.
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