Tunney Lee

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Tunney Lee
Born1931 (1931)
Taishan, China
DiedJuly 2, 2020(2020-07-02) (aged 88–89)
MIT

Tunney Lee (Chinese: 李燦輝, 1931 – July 2, 2020) was an architect, planner, educator, and activist known for his community engagement work primarily in Chinatown, Boston.[1] Lee was a professor emeritus of urban planning and a former head of the Department of Urban Studies and Planning (DUSP) within the MIT School of Architecture and Planning. He is also known as the founder of the Department of Architecture at The Chinese University of Hong Kong (CUHK),[2] now called the School of Architecture. Lee also maintained a career in public service as chief of planning and design for the Boston Redevelopment Authority and deputy commissioner of the state Division of Capital Planning and Operations under Governor Michael S. Dukakis. He died on July 2, 2020, in Boston at the age of 88.[3]

Early life and education

Tunney Lee was born in 1931 in Taishan, China to his father, Kwang Lien Lee, a lawyer, and mother, Kam Kwai Chan. In 1938, Lee left his mother and three sisters and emigrated with his father to Boston's Chinatown[4] when he was seven years old.[5] He attended the Boston Latin School[6] before graduating with a degree in architecture from the University of Michigan in 1954.[7] The Lee family ties to the U.S. have a long history going back to Tunney Lee's great-grandfather, who worked on the transcontinental railroad in the 1860s and lived in Tacoma, Washington, before returning to China following violence and evictions against the Chinese.[8] Lee's great-grandfather returned to the U.S. in 1892 and worked in a laundry in Bridgewater, Massachusetts, before joined by Lee's grandfather to work in a laundry on Broad Street, Boston, in 1903.[8]

Work

After graduating from the University of Michigan, Lee worked for notable architects Buckminster Fuller and I.M. Pei.[3] In the late 1950s, Lee and his neighbors in Boston's Chinatown fought to resist the destruction of a portion of Chinatown by the planned Mass Pike connection to the Central Artery interstate highway[9] that helped to save the home where he grew up on 73 Hudson Street.[4] These efforts of community resistance are chronicled in Karilyn Crockett's book titled People Before Highways: Boston Activists, Urban Planners, and a New Movement for City Making.[10] In 1968 he was part of the team (with John Wiebenson, James Goodell, and Kenneth Jadin) that designed Resurrection City, an occupation of the Washington Mall in coordination with the Poor People's Campaign.[11]

Lee continued to grow his roots in Boston and joined MIT's Department of Urban Studies and Planning in 1970. He became tenured in 1977 and was promoted to full professor in 1985. Throughout his tenure at MIT, he worked to develop relationships with community-based organizations in Boston's Chinatown as well as Boston at large. In partnership with the Chinese Historical Society of New England, Chinatown Lantern Cultural and Educational Center, and UMass Boston Institute for Asian American Studies, Lee led MIT students to create the Chinatown Atlas.[3]

He published the book Development politics: Private development and the public interest (Studies in state development policy) in 1979, co-authored with Robert M. Hollister.[12]

References

  1. ^ "CHSNE Tunney F. Lee Memorial Lecture Series". Chinese Historical Society of New England. Retrieved 2020-08-18.
  2. ^ "LEE, Tunney". School of Architecture, CUHK. Retrieved 2020-08-18.
  3. ^ a b c "Tunney Lee, professor emeritus of urban planning, dies at 88". MIT News. Retrieved 2020-07-22.
  4. ^ a b Smith, Ken (2020-07-10). "In Memoriam". Sampan.org. Retrieved 2020-08-18.
  5. ^ "Tunney Lee, professor emeritus of urban planning, dies at 88". MIT News. Retrieved 2020-08-19.
  6. ^ "BLS-BLSA: Boston Latin School - Boston Latin School Association". www.bls.org. Retrieved 2020-08-18.
  7. ^ Marquard, Bryan (2020-07-05). "MIT professor Tunney Lee, an architect, urban planner, and historian of Chinatown, dies at 88 – The Boston Globe". BostonGlobe.com. Retrieved 2020-07-22.
  8. ^ a b 黃靈美, Ling-Mei Wong (2013-02-22). "Boston's Chinatown shows no sign of demise, scholar says". Sampan.org. Retrieved 2020-08-19.
  9. ^ "Exploring Boston's Unbuilt Highways". StreetsblogMASS. 2020-06-12. Retrieved 2020-08-19.
  10. .
  11. ^ Lee, Tunney and Lawrence Vale, "Resurrection City: Washington DC, 1968" in thresholds 41: REVOLUTION! (2013), 112–121 and Wiebenson, John. "Planning and Using Resurrection City," in Journal of the American Institute of Planners 35:6 (1969), 405–411
  12. OCLC 6327357
    .