Frederick Law Olmsted, Jr. was more of a city planner than his father. Olmsted, Jr. was a very important member of the City Beautiful and the City Efficient movements during the Progressive Era. He was more into making an urban environment beautiful rather than his father’s work to make urban parks, an oasis in the urban area. He once gave his idea for a motto for city planning, declaring, “Its aim is efficiency; its measure economy; its outcome Beauty.” Just as Olmsted was a leader in landscape architecture, his son was a leader in city planning. He sat on department boards and commissions, helped improve the planning of Washington, D.C. and creating the National Mall, designed the large city of Detroit Michigan, made site plans for new communities, and advised regional planning of places like metropolitan New York, just to name a few. He also started the first landscape architecture course in a university at his Alma Mater, Harvard University. Olmsted, Jr. had a big impact on the municipal planning field, but his bigger contribution was in conservation and preservation. …show more content…
The National Park Service Act in 1916’s mission statement was framed with the help of Olmsted, Jr. He also worked with preserving the Everglades in Florida and Yosemite National Park in California. His fight to protect the Red Wood trees in California was so appreciated that the National Park Service even named the Olmsted Grove, a group of trees in the Redwood National Park, after him. Olmsted’s legacy of preservation continued through his son, allowing for more people to be inspired to preserve our natural beauties in the