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John Gilderbloom

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John "Hans" Gilderbloom
Born(1952-10-00)October , 1952
Alma materUniversity of California, Santa Barbara(B.A., 1975; M.A. 1978; Ph.D., 1983)
Known forRent control
Urban renewal
Community organizing
Homeless advocacy
Livable cities
Community organizing
Climate change
Reversing climate change
Free speech
Scientific career
FieldsHousing,Green Cities
InstitutionsUniversity of Louisville
Center for Sustainable Urban Neighborhoods
Websitehttp://gilderbloom.org/
http://sun.louisville.edu
http://chromatichomes.com/

John "Hans" Gilderbloom is aDutch American community organizer, academic, author, and researcher. He works as an international consultant on creating livable neighborhoods and cities, owns a real estate company that renovates historic housing, and has taught at theUniversity of California, Santa Barbara,University of Wisconsin–Green Bay,University of Houston, and theUniversity of Louisville, where he was a Professor of Economics at the School of Business, Public Health, Sustainability, Planning, Public Administration, and Urban and Public Affairs for 37 years. In 2014, he was nominated as a Fellow of theScholars Strategy Network housed atHarvard University. He has been ranked as one of the "top 100 urban thinkers in the world."[1]

Early life and education

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Gilderbloom was born inSan Mateo,California to parents Murray Edward Gilderbloom (DutchGelderblom) and Jeanette Lauder Gilderbloom.

He grew up in San Francisco in a creative environment of writers and musicians. His godfather was Dave Lewis, aStanford University writing professor who was the co-author ofKlute, which won an Academy Award for Best Picture in 1970. Mark Dowie, former publisher and editor ofMother Jones, was a frequent Sunday guest for family meals. His uncle,Clarence W. Gilderbloom, was a respected inventor involved in developing patents for early versions of the dishwasher and a motorized Lazy Boy recliner. Another influential relative, Gilderbloom's distant cousin Hanneke Gelderblom, was featured in the documentarySex, Drugs, and Democracy. She was elected a Senator in the Netherlands and worked at theInternational Court of Justice.

Gilderbloom received his B.A. (1975), M.A. (1978), and Ph.D. (1983) in Sociology from theUniversity of California, Santa Barbara. He graduated with the highest GPA in his graduating class (1975) with a straight A average. While at UCSB, he took classes from and was mentored byHarvey Molotch,Richard Appelbaum, and took classes fromDavid Harvey (who stayed with him while teaching at UCSB),Christopher Jencks, W. Dennis Keating, Michael Teitz,Jürgen Habermas, Roger Friedland, William Bielby, andWilliam Domhoff.

Community organizer

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In high school, Gilderbloom worked with protest groups against the Vietnam War, forenvironmental awareness following theSanta Barbara Oil Spill, andCesar Chavez in the localGrape Boycott.

In the 1970s, Gilderbloom organized several local, state and national tenant organizations including the California Housing Action and Information Network to help pass rent control laws and other tenant protections. The Foundation for National Progress (Mother Jones) published an organizing manual,Rent Control: A Source Book which was adopted by the emerging tenant movement in the 1980s. Orange County'sThe Register called it the "Bible" of the rent control movement and it received both praise and attacks fromThe Nation,The New York Times, andThe Wall Street Journal.[2][3][4] He later published a book,Community Versus Commodity: Tenants and the American City on the renters movement with Stella Capek.[5]

Gilderbloom himself has experienced the landlords' wrath. He was advised to halt his study several times. "You'll never survive to finish your work," one industry lobbyist warned him. In another instance, a real estate agent wrote one of the Governor's aides that: "We must find a way to neutralize him [Gilderbloom]."[2] Gilderbloom worked withMitch Snyder, founder of theNational Coalition for the Homeless, to block PresidentRonald Reagan from prohibiting federal funds to cities who have enacted rent control. He co-authored a study demonstrating that rent control was not correlated with increases in the homeless population,[6] refuting William Tucker's research. President Reagan's proposal was defeated in Congress.

Later Gilderbloom began work in poor neighborhoods to develop affordable, accessible, and attractive housing. He writes about his struggles inPromise and Betrayal: Universities and the Battle for Sustainable Urban Neighborhoods.[7][8]

Academic career

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Gilderbloom was a professor in the Department of Urban and Public Affairs atUniversity of Louisville for 37 years. His research interests include research methods, statistics, housing, community development, planning and design.[9] Gilderbloom is also the Director of the Center for Sustainable Urban Neighborhoods, a research center that explores ways to create more sustainable communities.[10] He is a frequent collaborator withDr. William (Billy) Riggs fromUniversity of San Francisco.

Gilderbloom has written and edited eight books and countless articles on issues concerning rental housing, poverty, health, community development, and urban policy. His work includes, 68 peer-reviewed publications (including several in Journal of Urban Affairs), 30 book chapters, eight authored or co-authored books or journals, and [...] op-ed pieces in Wall Street Journal, Washington Post, Los Angeles Times, Chicago Sun-Times, USA Today Magazine, Governing Magazine, American Banker, Courier Journal, and many other outlets."[11] His bookRethinking Rental Housing was called "[T]he most significant piece on housing policy written in the last 40 years" by Daniel Lauber, past President of theAmerican Planning Association.[12] A National Housing Institute Survey of Books in Housing Courses foundRethinking Rental Housing to be the most widely chosen book in college housing courses.[12] He later updated the book with new chapters and new numbers called:Invisible City: Housing, Poverty, and New Urbanism.Additionally, Gilderbloom contributed a chapter on modern Cuban architecture for the Encyclopedia of 20th-Century Architecture which won Planetizen's top ten best books in planning for 2005[13] and a chapter on the history of rent strikes for the Encyclopedia of Housing, 2nd edition,[14] which won best reference book award from American Library Association.[15][16][17] Gilderbloom has been consulted by several countries for his work, including Russia, Cuba, Venezuela, Mexico, the Netherlands, and Spain.

Other work

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Neighborhood revitalization

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Gilderbloom runs a successful consulting business and has contributed his expertise on numerous neighborhood revitalization projects in West Louisville, Newport (KY), Covington (KY), and Southern Indiana worth over $100 million. His work has been featured in The New York Times. The East Russel Partnership, a collaboration between local organizations; city, state, and federal government; and the Center for Sustainable Urban Neighborhoods received the Sierra Club'sBest Practices Award, given for smart growth projects for their success in West Louisville.[18] He has also worked with cities to produce "green housing developments" in Louisville, Indianapolis, Muncie, IN; Covington, KY; and Newport, KY.

Real estate

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Gilderbloom has restored 25 historic homes in Louisville, Houston, Green Bay, and currently in Scottsdale and Phoenix as a part of his business, one of which has been featured inThe New York Times[19] and been the set of the movieThe Song. His homes are restored using principles of green design.

Recognitions and achievements

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Gilderbloom's research has earned him numerous awards and recognition throughout his career. His largest recognition was an international survey of planners and city officials of theTop 100 Urban Thinkers poll conducted byPlanetizen, where he was ranked as 63 (placing him in the top forty for living urban thinkers).[20] Additionally, he was chosen as one of the select few academics to be a commentator in Politico's "Arena."[21] He was awarded by the University of Louisville the Presidential Medal for Distinguished Faculty in Research and Creative Activity (2013).[22] In 1997 he was awarded honorary membership in thePhi Kappa Phi for his "outstanding research and character".

In 1982 Gilderbloom received the American Planning Association Chapter Award for Outstanding Contribution to Planning for his research on inter-city rent differentials and housing policy analysis. A year later in 1983, Gilderbloom received the Douglas A. McGregor Memorial Award for Outstanding Social Science from the Journal of Applied Behavioral Science for his research paper "Housing Supply and Regulation: A Study of Rental Housing Market", co-written with Dr. Richard Appelbaum.[23]

His work on rent control includes two books, eight scholarly articles, and numerous op-eds in publications includingThe Wall Street Journal[24] andThe Los Angeles Times,[25] making him one of the most outspoken scholars on rent control.

He was previously starred in the filmRubbertown.

He is currently working on adocumentary film which hopes to get wide distribution in classrooms.

Selected publications

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  • Climate Chaos: Killing People, Places, and the Planet (edited by John Hans Gilderbloom, 2025, Lexington Press, New York, New York)
  • Chromatic Homes: A Design & Coloring Book (John I. "Hans" Gilderbloom. 2019. University Press of Kentucky)
  • Chromatic Homes: The Joy of Color in Historic Places (written by John I. "Hans" Gilderbloom. 2018. University Press of Kentucky)
  • Series Urban Degradation and Public Health for Praeger Books. Including: 2017 “America’s Addiction to the Automobile” by Chad Frederick. Santa Barbara, CA Praeger Publishing House (John Gilderbloom editorial director of book series on Public Health and Urban Toxins)
  • Sustain: Special Issue: Alternative Transportation Guest Editor John I. Gilderbloom and Wesley Meares in Sustain: A Journal of Environmental and Sustainability Issues. University of Louisville: Kentucky Institute for Sustainable Development 2012 (26) Spring/Summer
  • Sustain: Special Issue: Sustainable Communities: The Ideal City Guest Editor with Matt Hanka. Sustain: A Journal of Environmental and Sustainability Issues. University of Louisville: Kentucky Institute for Sustainable Development 2010 (29) Fall/ Winter 2010, pages 1–47
  • Invisible City: Housing, Poverty and New Urbanism (by John I. Gilderbloom. Austin, TX: University of Texas Press, Winter 2008, pages 1–263)
  • Sustain: Special Issue: International Sustainability: Edited by John Gilderbloom. Sustain: A Journal of Environmental and Sustainability Issues. University of Louisville: Kentucky Institute for Sustainable Development. Special Editor for Fall/Winter 2005, Issue 11
  • Promise and Betrayal: The University and the Battle for Sustainable Urban Neighborhoods. 2008. Albany, New York: State University New York Press)
  • Community Versus Commodity: Tenants and the American City (written by Stella Capek and John I. Gilderbloom. Albany: SUNY Press)
  • Rethinking Rental Housing (by John I. Gilderbloom and Richard Appelbaum. 1988 Phil.: Temple Univ. Press (first Printing December 1987 hard cover; second printing February 1988 soft cover; third printing May 1989 soft cover)
  • Rent Control: A Source Book (edited by John I. Gilderbloom. 1981 San Francisco: Foundation for National Progress, Housing Information Center (First Printing December 1979; Second Printing June 1981; Third Printing July 1982)

References

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  1. ^"Top 100 Urban Thinkers".Planetizen. Archived fromthe original on September 22, 2009. RetrievedJanuary 31, 2015.
  2. ^abKoeppel, Barbara (May 26, 1979). "Rent Control: A Tenant Revolt".The Nation.
  3. ^Pransky, Joan (August 10, 1980)."Landlord Strategy: Divide and Conquer Rent Control".The New York Times. RetrievedAugust 13, 2014.
  4. ^Freeman, Gerald (September 7, 1980)."Rent Controls: A Plea to Dump Them".The New York Times. RetrievedAugust 13, 2014.
  5. ^Capek, Stella; Gilderbloom, John (February 1992).Community Versus Commodity: Tenants and the American City. Albany: State University of New York.ISBN 978-0791408414.
  6. ^Appelbaum, Richard; Dolney, Michael; Dreier, Peter; Gilderbloom, John (1991)."Scapegoating Rent Control: Masking the Causes of Homelessness".Journal of the American Planning Association.57 (2):153–164.doi:10.1080/01944369108975484.
  7. ^Gilderbloom, John; Mullins, Robert (2005).Promise and Betrayal: Universities and the Battle for Sustainable Urban Neighborhoods. Albany: State University of New York.ISBN 978-0791464830.
  8. ^Marriott, Michel (August 4, 1996)."Taking Education Beyond the Classroom".The New York Times. RetrievedAugust 13, 2014.
  9. ^"Ph.D. Program Faculty".Ph.D. in Urban and Public Affairs. University of Louisville. RetrievedJune 16, 2014.
  10. ^"Homepage".Department of Urban and Public Affairs at University of Louisville. University of Louisville. RetrievedJune 16, 2014.
  11. ^"John I. Gilderbloom gets Major Award".Urban Affairs Association. RetrievedJuly 9, 2014.
  12. ^ab"Rethinking Rental Housing".Temple University Press. RetrievedJuly 9, 2014.
  13. ^Sennott, Stephen (2003).Encyclopedia of 20th Century Architecture. Routledge.ISBN 1579582435.
  14. ^Carswell, Andrew (2012).Encyclopedia of Housing (2nd ed.). SAGE Publications, Inc.ISBN 9781412989572.
  15. ^"Outstanding Reference Sources 2013 List".American Library Association. RUSA. January 29, 2014. RetrievedAugust 13, 2014.
  16. ^Chavan, Abhijeet."Top 10 Books - 2005".Planetizen. Urban Insight, Inc. RetrievedJuly 25, 2014.
  17. ^Coutts, Brian; LaGuardia, Cheryl."Best References of 2012".Library Journal. Media Source, Inc. RetrievedJuly 25, 2014.
  18. ^"East Russell Partnership, Louisville, Kentucky".EPA. April 5, 2013. Archived fromthe original on May 29, 2012. RetrievedJuly 17, 2014.
  19. ^Chura, Hillary (May 19, 2007)."Houseguests Who Pay, and Pay Well".The New York Times. RetrievedAugust 13, 2014.
  20. ^"Top 100 Urban Thinkers".Planetizen. Archived fromthe original on September 22, 2009. RetrievedJuly 1, 2014.
  21. ^"Arena Profile: John Gilderbloom".The Arena. Politico. Archived fromthe original on March 4, 2012. RetrievedAugust 13, 2014.
  22. ^"Administration recognizes faculty scholarship, creative activity, teaching".Louisville.edu. U of L Today. RetrievedJuly 1, 2014.
  23. ^Appelbaum, Richard; Gilderbloom, John (1983)."Housing Supply and Regulation: A Study of the Rental Housing Market".Journal of Applied Behavioral Science.19:1–18.doi:10.1177/002188638301900102. RetrievedAugust 13, 2014.
  24. ^Gilderbloom, John (August 19, 1993). "A New Lease on Life for Rent Control".Wall Street Journal.
  25. ^Lowe, Cary; Gilderbloom, John (December 11, 1979). "Fair Rent Initiative is Unfair to Tenants".Los Angeles Times.
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