Early life and education Lynch was born as the youngest child of an Irish-American family on January 7, 1918. He was raised on Chicago's North Side. After graduating from the
Francis Parker School in 1935, Lynch matriculated at
Yale University intending to study architecture. Finding its pedagogy too conservative, he left to study under
Frank Lloyd Wright at
Taliesin in
Spring Green, Wisconsin and Scottsdale Arizona. Lynch later stated that
Wright was a great influence, but disagreed with his individualistic social philosophy. Leaving Wright after a year and a half, he enrolled at
Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute in
Troy, New York to study engineering in 1939, but did not complete the program and went to work for Chicago architect
Paul Schweikher. In 1941, Lynch married Anne Borders, a fellow graduate of the Parker School. Three weeks after his wedding, Lynch was drafted into the
Army Corps of Engineers, serving in the siege of Peleliu, the
Philippines and Japan through January 1946. After the war, he completed his undergraduate education at
MIT and received a Bachelor's degree in
city planning in 1947.
Academic career After graduation, Lynch began work in
Greensboro, North Carolina as an urban planner but was soon recruited to teach at
MIT by Lloyd Rodwin. He began lecturing at
MIT the following year, becoming an assistant professor in 1949, a tenured associate professor in 1955, and a full professor in 1963. In 1958 Lynch wrote an essay ‘The theory of urban form’ with Lloyd Rodwin where the city is described through the complementary of two systems – flows and adapted spaces – interpreted starting from a group of descriptive categories of urban form. Lynch and Kepes' research was published in 1960 as Lynch's book
The Image of the City. In 1970, Lynch received funding from
UNESCO to study the use of cities by young people in urban areas of
Salta,
Melbourne,
Toluca, and
Kraków, a project summarized in his book
Growing Up in Cities (1977). Lynch provided seminal contributions to the field of
City Planning through empirical research on how individuals perceive and navigate the urban landscape.
Later life Lynch became professor emeritus in 1978, but continued to write and practice architecture. He died of a heart attack at his summer home at Gay Head on
Martha's Vineyard, on April 25, 1984. ==
The Image of the City ==