City College, City University of New York Northwestern University
Years active
50
Employer(s)
UCLA Urban Planning and Institute of Transportation Studies UC Berkeley, Institute of Transportation Studies Northwestern University University of Illinois at Chicago
Known for
Transportation planning, urban planning, equity in planning
Board member of
President, Transportation Research Board, 2000 California High Speed Rail Peer Review Group Director, Transportation, Space and Technology Program at Rand Corp.
Pyke Johnson Award for outstanding paper published in the field of transportation systems planning and administration, Transportation Research Board, 2019, 1976[4]
Martin Wachs (1941–2021)[2] was an American professor emeritus of Urban Planning at the University of California, Los Angeles and of City and Regional Planning and of Civil and Environmental Engineering[2] at the University of California, Berkeley. He began his career in university teaching in 1968 and retired from teaching in 2006, to work at the Rand Corporation until 2010.
He taught at University of Illinois at Chicago as assistant professor of systems engineering, then as assistant professor of civil engineering at Northwestern University before heading west to California. He was an associate professor in a newly founded Graduate School of Architecture and Urban Planning at University of California, Los Angeles in 1971, the start of a long career in the University of California system. Besides teaching in Los Angeles, he spent 10 years at UC Berkeley, with the Institute of Transportation Studies.[2]
He was one of the earliest scholars to address transportation's relationship to social equity, environmental quality, and community values.[5]
He wrote 180 articles and four books on subjects related to transportation and land use.[6]
Wachs was awarded the Guggenheim Fellowship[7] for his exceptional scholarship in Architecture, Planning and Design and the Carey Award for service to the Transportation Research Board.[8][9]
He retired from teaching in 2006, to work at the Rand Corporation until 2010.[2]