In 1899, he founded the Garden Cities Association, known now as the
Town and Country Planning Association. By his association with
Henry Harvey Vivian and the
co-partnership housing movement, his ideas attracted enough attention and funding to begin
Letchworth Garden City, a suburban
garden city north of London. In 1901, under the guidance of Henry Vivian, a new co-partnership housing development venture was started in the
London Borough of Ealing that was to become the
Brentham Garden Suburb, now a conservation area. A second garden city,
Welwyn Garden City, was started after
World War I. His acquaintance with German architects
Hermann Muthesius and
Bruno Taut resulted in the application of humane design principles in many large housing projects built in the
Weimar Republic. Hermann Muthesius also played an important role in the creation of Germany's first garden city of
Hellerau in 1909, the only German garden city where Howard's ideas were thoroughly adopted. The creation of
Letchworth Garden City and
Welwyn Garden City were influential for the development of "
New Towns" after
World War II by the British government. This produced more than 30 communities, the first being
Stevenage, Hertfordshire (about halfway between Letchworth and Welwyn), and the last (and largest) being
Milton Keynes, Buckinghamshire. Howard's ideas also influenced other planners such as
Frederick Law Olmsted II and
Clarence Perry.
Walt Disney used elements of Howard's concepts in his original design for
EPCOT (Experimental Prototype Community of Tomorrow). In 1913, Howard founded the 'Garden Cities and Town Planning Association' – presently the
International Federation for Housing and Planning. ==Personal Life & Death==