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What landscape architects need to know. The small design firms in the collective can team up on bigger projects and find ...
Tubbs' summer internship has become a teachable moment for the whole city. By Anjulie Rao Just east of the White River in Indianapolis sat the Greenlawn Cemetery, one of the city’s oldest public ...
Designers, historians, and community members collaborate on a landscape plan for the city’s neglected sites of enslavement. By Kim O’Connell On a typical weekday, the historic Main Street Station in ...
Since the 2018 midterm elections, the Green New Deal has catapulted into the public conversation about tackling climate change and income inequality in America. It has inspired a diverse coalition of ...
What landscape architects need to know. Landscape architects are working with the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers and building new networks through the Engineering With Nature program. The implications ...
What landscape architects need to know. Gulf State Park in Alabama is one of the largest public projects to be funded through the Deepwater Horizon settlement. Many more are coming. By Jared Brey The ...
What landscape architects need to know. Prodded by new laws, designers join France’s emerging circular economy. By Ilana Cohen Architecture 2030 estimates that the embodied carbon of materials will ...
A hawk glides overhead. An egret perches alongside a pedestrian walkway. Butterflies flutter in the foreground. From across the spectrum of the animal kingdom they appear in the drawings and ...
What landscape architects need to know. Designers and advocates reckon with the uneasy history of safety in environmental design. By Karl Krause In 1285, King Edward of England issued the Statute of ...
What landscape architects need to know. Refugia converts homeowners into native plant advocates, one lawn at a time. By Jared Brey Jeff Lorenz stood under the mid-June sun at FDR Park, monitoring the ...
Famed landscape architect Michael Van Valkenburg writes about managing landscapes, including parks and other large design projects over time.
The first thing you notice is all the cars. The Potrero Hill housing projects occupy a strange landscape divided by Jersey barriers and concrete retaining walls that carve up the site’s topography.
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