Rural Chinatowns and Hidden Sites

by Barbara Wyatt, FASLA

Terrace, Utah / image: used by permission, Utah Historical Society

Rural Chinatowns and Hidden Sites Conference
June 18-21, 2024 | Salt Lake City, Utah
Deadline to register: May 31

The landscape of Chinatowns is much wider than many would imagine—and many were in some of the nation’s most rural areas. At the Rural Chinatowns and Hidden Sites Conference, presentations about rural Chinese settlements from coast to coast will be explored by archaeologists, historians, preservationists, and descendants of workers who lived in these remote settlements. Some rural Chinatowns have left few aboveground remains, and others are “ghost towns.” The conference will also explore the Chinatowns that were once evident in many cities and towns but were abandoned—sometimes by violent acts of discrimination. In many places, these lost communities are being interpreted, memorialized, and commemorated and the contributions of early Chinese residents to a town’s settlement and development are being acknowledged. Both urban and rural places present fascinating stories of boom and bust, angst and exclusion, and triumph and resilience—and raise innumerable preservation and planning questions and opportunities.

The conference will consist of two days of presentations and discussions and a day devoted to field trips, with two options: a day-long trip to Terrace, Utah, a ghost town associated with Chinese railroad workers, or a slightly shorter trip to the Golden Spike National Historical Park, which celebrates Chinese workers—among others— associated with the construction of the transcontinental railroad.

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Words of Wisdom for Our 2024 Landscape Architecture Graduates

by Chloe Gillespie, Associate ASLA, Magdalena Aravena, PLA, ASLA, Jennifer Ng, PLA, ASLA, Adrian Alexander, Associate ASLA, Megan Barnes, Lexi Banks, Associate ASLA, Gretchen Wilson, PLA, ASLA, LEED, WEDG, Emily Siler, Associate ASLA, Kim Case, PLA, ASLA, CSI CDT®, and Dr. Bo Zhang, ASLA

Images courtesy of Adrian Alexander, Chloe Gillespie, Emily Siler, Kim Case, Lexi Banks, Magdalena Aravena, and Megan Barnes

Congratulations, Class of 2024!

All your hard work is paying off and you are getting your degree! For many of you, this has been a day you have been dreaming about for years, and now it is finally here. So many of you were not able to have a proper high school graduation, making this year extra special. This is your time to shine and come up into the profession ready to put your new knowledge and skills to work. To help get you started, the ASLA Student Support and Engagement Committee has collected some words of wisdom to share with you from recent graduates, current students, and seasoned professionals.

We hope you find meaning in these words and you can rely on them as you establish your career. Throughout your career in landscape architecture, there will be great days and there will be rough patches you will have to learn how to manage and adapt to. But for you, that is nothing new: you navigated your way through college during a global pandemic. Figuring out how to be flexible and persevere are skills that are learned the hard way, but they are invaluable skills to have. And it’s okay to change—iteration is a part of design.

We hope these words of advice encourage you and inspire you as you emerge into the extraordinary world of landscape architecture. Congratulations again, Class of 2024! Keep up the great work!

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Transit Oriented Districts: Urban Design Experience

by Taner R. Özdil, Ph.D., ASLA, Kal Almo, ASLA, AIA, Lauren Patterson, PLA, ASLA, Jenny Zhang, Associate ASLA, Tyler Smithson, ASLA, and Brent Raymond, ASLA, OALA, FCSLA, MCIP RPP

Mockingbird Station, Dallas, TX / image: Taner R. Ozdil

Transit Oriented Districts have been helping reinvigorate towns and cities across the United States and Canada. Beyond the limiting definition of Transit Oriented Development (TOD), Transit Oriented Districts (TODts), are typically defined as the whole area within half a mile of a transit station and are seen as desirable choices for development in metropolitan areas to accommodate the concerns surrounding population growth.

TODts are typically characterized by higher development density and a varied mix of land uses, offering sustainable development options to counteract some of the negative effects of urban sprawl, declining urban cores, and congestion sparked by rising populations and mobility. They contain a diverse mix of uses such as housing, employment, institutions, shops, restaurants, and entertainment. These districts aspire to have a strong sense of place, and a diverse set of travel mode choices. TODts are typically designed in conformance with a coherent district plan or zoning overlay that commonly stipulates the type and scale of uses, permitted densities, and related regulatory and recommended items. These districts are usually expected to be organized around the station areas with unified plazas, squares, parks, and streetscapes, and function more like a district than a single development and a project (Ozdil, 2014).

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Voices of Women in Landscape Architecture, Part 6

Clockwise from top left: Kristen Sweatland / image: LandDesign. Laurie Hall, ASLA. Donna Rodman. Rituparna Simlai, ASLA / image: Javier Alba.

ASLA’s Women in Landscape Architecture Professional Practice Network (WILA PPN) is sharing the next set of profiles of women in the profession (see last week’s right here). If you’d like to be featured, the PPN’s call for submissions will remain open, with profiles being shared on an ongoing basis.

Submit a WILA profile!

These profiles will appear on the PPN’s LinkedIn group, Facebook group, and here on The Field. This post includes Rituparna Simlai, ASLA, Laurie Hall, ASLA, Kristen Sweatland, and Donna Rodman.

Rituparna Simlai, ASLA

What inspired you to pursue a career in landscape architecture?

As a child, I had an innate proclivity of being closer to the natural world. The organic rhythms of nature, the dappled sunshine filtering through trees, the waves in the ocean—I could spend hours capturing these moments. In nature, I felt a stirring energy within me that resonated in a unique way unmatched by any other setting.

While practicing as a licensed architect in Delhi, I constantly felt the desire to integrate ecological principles into design practices. I recognized the principles of landscape architecture, in particular, offered me an opportunity to choreograph spatial flows, enrich people’s experiences, and foster human connection with nature, creating harmony.

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What is Public Practice Landscape Architecture?

Engaging and collaborating with community members is an essential skill for landscape architects that work in public practice. | ASLA 2021 Professional Urban Design Honor Award. Market + Georgia Public Space, Chattanooga, Tennessee. WMWA Landscape Architects and Genesis the Greykid. Client: City of Chattanooga C/O Chattanooga Design Studio. / WMWA Landscape Architects & Chattanooga Design Studio

Public practice landscape architecture is a not-for-profit enterprise. Its mission is to design, implement, and manage functional, liveable, safe, and attractive places for the public. These spaces are often developed with a larger social goal in mind.

Goals can include:

  • Community gathering
  • Preservation and acknowledgment of history and place
  • Environmental resilience
  • Economic vitality

Public practice, including non-profit and governmental work, offers unique opportunities and challenges for practitioners. The ASLA Public Practice Subcommittee encourages more landscape architects to pursue careers in the public sector, especially students in landscape architecture programs and emerging professionals.

Less than ten percent of ASLA’s membership identify as public practitioners. They work for local, state, and federal government agencies, universities and colleges, transit agencies, or parks and arboreta. Many of these ASLA members have found their way to public practice after years in private practice. They seek to have an impact on public spaces for the common good.

For landscape architects, emerging professionals, students, allied professionals, and others who may be less familiar with this type of landscape architecture practice, members of the Public Practice Subcommittee have created an online guide outlining 10 distinctive aspects of public practice work:

  • Public Communications
  • Contract Administration
  • Data Collection & Analysis
  • Design
  • Engagement
  • Project Management
  • Public Asset Management
  • Regulation & Compliance
  • Representation
  • Research & Documentation

Explore Public Practice Landscape Architecture >

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Reimagining Abandoned Airfields Through Adaptive Reuse

by Anhad Viswanath, Associate ASLA

ASLA 2021 Professional Urban Design Honor Award. Xuhui Runway Park. Shanghai, China. Sasaki / image: Insaw Photography

This post discusses “Reed City’s Exhilarating Thrust,” a design concept I crafted while a student at Michigan State University that illustrates the wonder and excitement that the race circuit brings. The design includes a four-mile racetrack with elevated inclines over an existing road, housing, and spaces for residents and visitors to socialize and enjoy the races. Pedestrian bridges, trail connections, and a bus transit hub create multimodal connectivity.

[Editor’s note to students with exemplary work to share: the ASLA Student Awards Call for Entries is open now! Registration is due May 3 and submissions are due May 24.]

Globally, many airports face an uncertain future, and some are at the brink of closure. In the United States, there are 20,000 functional airports (private, commercial, and military), and 1,000 more that are abandoned, on-hold, or underused. This represents both a significant issue moving forward, and also a significant opportunity for reimagining these built environments.

According to a Developments in the Built Environment article on the former Hellenikon Airport in Athens—now being developed into Ellinikon Metropolitan Park—airports, or airfields, are a type of built environment where there is a relatively low density of infrastructure and are characterized by open spaces. Airports cover large portions of land and encompass various types of facilities that can often exacerbate environmental issues for surrounding areas. This makes airports, especially abandoned airports, capable of damaging the environment and wasting land and resources.

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Springtime Abundance

Register by May 3, 2024, for the ASLA Student Awards! Student Award submissions are due May 24, 2024. ASLA 2021 Student General Design Honor Award. Wildlife Lives Matter: Hedgehog-Aided Design in Urban Areas. Xinyue Wang; Xindi Zhang; Chenyue Zhang; Muwen Qin; Meisi Wang; Shuyu Wei; Faculty Advisor: Jun Zhai; Soochow University / image: Chenyue Zhang; Xindi Zhang; Xinyue Wang

As we get deeper into spring, and in the midst of a whole host of ASLA chapter conferences and World Landscape Architecture Month festivities, now’s the time to get these upcoming deadlines (some are just days away!) on your calendars. Below are a few highlights from ASLA’s RFQs, Opportunities, and Events page and a few Professional Practice Network (PPN) leader recommendations to check out. Friendly reminder: anyone with an opportunity to share may submit them via the ASLA website.

Just Communities Accredited Practitioner Foundations Course
Registration deadline: April 15, 2024
This live Zoom course, taking place April 18-19, will provide you with a comprehensive understanding of the framework that puts racial equity and climate resilience at the heart of every decision. Participants will also have the opportunity to connect with peers in small groups and reflect on understanding and operationalizing equity together.

RFQ: Memorial to the Enslaved at James Madison’s Montpelier
Deadline: April 20, 2024
The Montpelier Descendants Committee and The Montpelier Foundation are seeking letters of interest and supporting materials from qualified landscape architects, architects, and/or artists, as individuals or in teams, to develop a design for a memorial at the Montpelier Burial Ground of the Enslaved at Montpelier in Orange, Virginia. The Montpelier memorial will honor the lives and contributions of the approximately 300 people who were enslaved at James Madison’s Montpelier and an unknown number who were enslaved at the surrounding plantations owned by the Madisons and others.

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Voices of Women in Landscape Architecture, Part 5

Left to right: Lucila Silva-Santisteban, ASLA, Martha Fajardo, and Dana Hernalsteen, ASLA

ASLA’s Women in Landscape Architecture Professional Practice Network (WILA PPN) is sharing the next set of profiles of women in the profession (see last week’s right here). If you’d like to be featured, the PPN’s call for submissions will remain open, with profiles being shared on an ongoing basis.

Submit a WILA profile!

These profiles will appear on the PPN’s LinkedIn group, Facebook group, and here on The Field. This post includes Dana Hernalsteen, ASLA, Lucila Silva-Santisteban, ASLA, and Martha Fajardo.

Dana Hernalsteen, ASLA

What inspired you to pursue a career in landscape architecture?

My parents did! My mother went to art school and was VP of Marketing for a credit union while my father worked in HVAC and was an avid outdoorsman. He was always bringing home blueprints and getting me out into nature.

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Transporting SITES to Washington

by CeCe Haydock, ASLA, PLA, SITES AP, LEED AP, WEDG

The Atlanta BeltLine’s Historic Old Fourth Ward, a SITES pilot project / image: Aaron Coury, courtesy of the Atlanta BeltLine

“Though the word beautification makes the concept sound merely cosmetic, it involves much more: clean water, clean air, clean roadsides, safe waste disposal, and preservation of valued old landmarks as well as great parks and wilderness areas.

To me…beautification means our total concern for the physical and human quality we pass on to our children and the future.”

Lady Bird Johnson, “The Environmental First Lady”

With these word, Kevin Burke, FASLA, Design Director, Atlanta BeltLine, Brandon Hartz, ASLA, PLA, SITES AP, LEED AP, Design Director of Landscape Architecture for the General Services Administration (GSA), and I introduced the concept of the SITES v2 Rating System to members of the Standing Committee on Landscape and Environmental Design of the Transportation Research Board (TRB) on one early January 2024 day in Washington, D.C. There were approximately 30 landscape architects and engineers in the room, with many more virtually because of TRB’s large membership. Focusing on sustainability and the massive US transportation system, the presenters borrowed the words of Lady Bird Johnson, who advocated for both beauty and environmental function of roadways throughout the country.

The Standing Committee on Landscape and Environmental Design, comprised mostly of landscape architects, was one of many committees which convened in Washington for the annual TRB conference. During four days of presentations, panels, and internal meetings, approximately 10,000 transportation researchers and practitioners gathered to share diverse knowledge related to all sectors of transportation.

For the presentation “The Atlanta BeltLine: Railroad Corridor to Sustainable Link,” I introduced the SITES v2 Rating System and its relevance to transportation projects. In the SITES system, design is divided into major areas—soil and vegetation, water, materials, and human health and well-being—and is similar to LEED in concept and practice.

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Voices of Women in Landscape Architecture, Part 4

Clockwise from top left: Jennifer Cooper, ASLA / image: C.M. Howard Photography. Anne Chen, ASLA. Meghan Mick, ASLA.

ASLA’s Women in Landscape Architecture Professional Practice Network (WILA PPN) is sharing the next set of profiles of women in the profession (see last week’s right here). If you’d like to be featured, the PPN’s call for submissions will remain open, with profiles being shared on an ongoing basis.

Submit a WILA profile!

These profiles will appear on the PPN’s LinkedIn group, Facebook group, and here on The Field. This post includes Jennifer Cooper, ASLA, Anne Chen, ASLA, and Meghan Mick, ASLA.

Jennifer Cooper, ASLA

What inspired you to pursue a career in landscape architecture?

My father was a stained glass artist who restored the Frank Lloyd Wright Home and Studio in Oak Park, IL, so I grew up running around these interesting buildings. He was always either in his workshop or sketching new ideas in his little yellow notepad. My mom was a homemaker with a real talent for oil painting. So art was always in the air in our house. Growing up in a very green Chicago suburb, I always loved nature, so combining the two was a natural fit for landscape architecture.

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From Landscape Architecture to Art (and Back?), Part 2

by Darren Sears

Lagoon, watercolor on paper, 36”x36.” El Angel Reserve and village, Ecuador. / art © Darren Sears /HANG ART Gallery

In part 1, published last week, we took a look at how immersive representations of ecological islands and contrasts evolved into a kind of artistic map design; today’s post explores how these maps might convey multiple ways of relating to our ever-changing environment.

My urge to heighten the feeling of psychological control over clearly defined pieces of the natural world has expanded to include an additional, less idiosyncratic aspect—a kind of protective impulse. That’s because these islands of nature, whether they’re defined by environmental conditions or human-created in the first place, tend to be especially vulnerable to climate change, invasive species, and other threats. (Feeling the “world at your fingertips” is appropriately similar to “holding the fate of the world in our hands.”) The faceted structure of the maps doesn’t just compress the geographies they represent. It also seems to freeze those geographies in space and time just as they’re on the verge of shattering, as if they were delicate crystals. Those of us who think of such islands as fragile and “precious” do so both because of and despite the fact that we know that their fixed boundaries are an illusion. We realize that, at least at some spatial and temporal scale, the natural world is inherently and constantly changing thanks to a combination of human interactions and its own processes.

I think this illusion is possible (I’d guess not only for me) because we psychologically compartmentalize stability from change, rather than blending them together into a continuum where change essentially infiltrates and forces out any notion of permanence. We can preserve some abstract idea of “pristine” nature as hiding “within” or “beneath” an overriding instability. Sometimes, and some places, it bubbles up toward the surface to make the place feel timeless in the moment. I give this conception (or “imaginary” as cultural geographers might call it) of stability-with-change the label of “isolation.” It sees nature as fundamentally apart—from physical change, human-caused and not, but also from our own fluid psychological framings of what nature means to us in the first place.

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Voices of Women in Landscape Architecture, Part 3

Clockwise from top left: Jan Satterthwaite, ASLA, PLA / image: Janet Klinger; image: courtesy of Qing Lana Luo, ASLA; Caeli Tolar, ASLA / image: Missy Boyer, CHW Inc.; image: selfie by Kristina Snyder, ASLA, PLA

ASLA’s Women in Landscape Architecture Professional Practice Network (WILA PPN) is sharing the next set of profiles of women in the profession (see last week’s right here). If you’d like to be featured, the PPN’s call for submissions will remain open, with profiles being shared on an ongoing basis.

Submit a WILA profile!

These profiles will appear on the PPN’s LinkedIn group, Facebook group, and here on The Field. This post includes Qing Lana Luo, ASLA, Caeli Tolar, ASLA, Jan Satterthwaite, ASLA, and Kristina Snyder, ASLA. Stay tuned for more WILA profiles as our celebration of women in landscape architecture continues.

Qing Lana Luo, ASLA

What inspired you to pursue a career in landscape architecture?

My path to landscape architecture was ignited by a profound affinity for design, nature, and the intricacies of urban landscapes. This profession seamlessly merges my enthusiasm for the outdoors with the ambition to forge meaningful, sustainable spaces amidst the urban sprawl. Central to my approach is the art of creative problem-solving—reimagining urban spaces as green, habitable zones that promote sustainability and enhance community life.

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From Landscape Architecture to Art (and Back?): “Realities” of Nature, Layered Up

by Darren Sears

Great Walk, watercolor on paper, 25”x50.” The Heaphy Track, New Zealand. / art © Darren Sears /HANG ART Gallery

In my fifteen years of landscape architecture education and practice I always felt pulled in two directions. On one hand, I was excited by the rapidly-evolving, idea- and technology-driven side of the field emphasizing the interconnectivity of cultural and natural processes. But on the other hand, I was still drawn to engage nature in a form-focused way that treats it as static and distinct; it’s this passion that led me to landscape architecture in the first place, before I appreciated the field’s complexity and potential.

About seven years ago I began what I expected to be a one- or two-year break from the profession to give some undivided attention to that original passion, through artwork, despite knowing its limitations. I suppose I wanted to get it out of my system. That work wouldn’t have taken the form that it did without those intervening years of design, but I never expected that the two pursuits (and those two directions) would intermingle to the degree and depth that they have. The journey isn’t finished yet, but it’s shed some new light on how these seemingly contradictory attitudes toward nature might be visualized and reconciled. This post, drawing and building upon my 2023 publication in the International Journal of Cartography, will dive into that journey.

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Voices of Women in Landscape Architecture, Part 2

Clockwise from left: Aida Curtis, FASLA, and her team in action / image: Curtis + Rogers Design Studio; Kathryn Talty, ASLA / image: Lisa FitzSimons Photography; CeCe Haydock, ASLA

ASLA’s Women in Landscape Architecture Professional Practice Network (WILA PPN) is sharing the next trio of profiles of women in the profession (see last week’s set right here). If you’d like to be featured, the PPN’s call for submissions will remain open, with profiles being shared on an ongoing basis.

Submit a WILA profile!

These profiles will appear on the PPN’s LinkedIn group, Facebook group, and here on The Field. This post includes Kathryn Talty, ASLA, Aida Curtis, FASLA, and CeCe Haydock, ASLA. Stay tuned for more WILA profiles in the coming weeks as our celebration of women in landscape architecture continues.

Kathryn Talty, ASLA

What inspired you to pursue a career in landscape architecture?

Though I didn’t realize it early on, my childhood years, dependent on the facilities of the Chicago Park District, were the most influential on my career path. Who knew that a city kid with one single tree on her entire block would become a landscape architect? Hours and hours in the summer biking through McKinley Park or taking tennis lessons at Gage Park formed my deep devotion to public green space. I intended to pursue an advanced degree in architecture while I was an undergrad, but while taking site design classes in the landscape architecture department, I realized I was “of the land.”

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The Art of Acknowledgment: Workplace Recognition Dos and Don’ts

image: Adobe Stock photo courtesy of PuzzleHR

ASLA announced a new affinity partnership with PuzzleHR earlier this year. Our organizations share a commitment to professional growth, organizational development, and continuous learning. We believe our collaboration will enhance the professional development of ASLA members and contribute valuable learning opportunities for leaders in landscape architecture.

A well-crafted rewards program can be an effective way to show thankfulness and foster a positive work environment all year-round.

Why Focus on Rewards and Recognition?

  • Employees who feel that recognition is essential to their organization are almost four times more likely to feel connected to their company culture.
  • Employees who receive recognition are 20 times more likely to be engaged than those who don’t.
  • Employees who believe their organization’s recognition program promotes company values are 4.9 times more likely to believe they know what is expected of them at work.

Workplace Recognition Dos and Don’ts

Do Make Recognition Attainable: A successful rewards program makes recognition attainable for all employees. Ensure you set clear and achievable goals that reflect the responsibilities of each role. Doing so creates an environment where everyone can be recognized for their efforts.

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Voices of Women in Landscape Architecture, Part 1

Left to right: Carolina Jaimes, ASLA; Connie Scothorn, ASLA, / image: Brian Patric, ASLA, CLS & Associates; Emily Greenwood, ASLA / image: ENVD CU-Boulder

ASLA’s Women in Landscape Architecture Professional Practice Network (WILA PPN) is happy to share our first trio of profiles of women in the profession. Friendly reminder: if you’d like to be featured, the PPN’s call for submissions will remain open, with profiles being shared on an ongoing basis.

Submit a WILA profile!

These profiles will appear on the PPN’s LinkedIn group, Facebook group, and here on The Field. This post includes Carolina Jaimes, ASLA, Connie Scothorn, ASLA, and Emily Greenwood, ASLA. Stay tuned for more WILA profiles in the coming weeks as our celebration of women in landscape architecture continues.

Carolina Jaimes, ASLA

What inspired you to pursue a career in landscape architecture?

I am from Colombia, the land of magical realism and one of the most biodiverse places on earth, so I guess that’s the root of my awe and curiosity for the natural environment. I have a bachelor’s degree in architecture and practiced it for 10 years, always trying to have a more sustainable practice. During the economic crisis of 2008/2009 we were working very limited hours in architecture so I decided to pursue my master’s at that point and that’s when I found and fell in love with landscape architecture. It was the perfect balance, what I was missing!

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New Frontiers of Biophilia

“We Are Connected Through Trees: New Frontiers of Biophilia” panelist Sara Zewde / image: Alexandra Hay

Over the last two weeks, the Kennedy Center hosted their second festival exploring art, nature, and the environment. This year’s theme: REACH to FOREST. Event curator Alicia Adams described the goal for the event as: “We hope that by rekindling the relationships between artists and scientists—as well as between humans, forests, trees, and wildlife—we can spark creative solutions for our future. We are living in a time when every seemingly insignificant choice we make as human beings may ultimately prove critical to our environment, our planet, and to our very survival.”

One of REACH to FOREST‘s many programs was a multidisciplinary panel on March 1, We Are Connected Through Trees: New Frontiers of Biophilia, that brought together a landscape architect, artist, activist, and scientist for an expansive conversation on access to nature, and the many forms that may take, as a central facet of wellbeing.

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Voices of Women in Landscape Architecture: Call for WILA Profiles

Clockwise from top left: images courtesy of Angelica Rockquemore, ASLA, Sandy Meulners, ASLA, Alexandra Mei, ASLA, Shuangwen Yang, Associate ASLA, Joni Hammons, ASLA, and © CPEX, and Sahar Teymouri, ASLA

With the start of Women’s History Month just days away, ASLA and the Women in Landscape Architecture Professional Practice Network (WILA PPN) have two opportunities to share:

Submit a Photo

Are you a licensed landscape architect who identifies as a woman or womxn? National ASLA is putting together a video celebrating women in landscape architecture, and we need your help to make it representative. If you’re interested in contributing, please send a photo of yourself to Katie Cain by Wednesday, February 28. Photos should have a 9:16 aspect ratio (vertical orientation).

Submit your photo!

Submit a WILA Profile

For Women’s History Month 2024 and beyond, the Women in Landscape Architecture PPN is launching a call for submissions from women in the profession (self-nominations and nominations welcome!). Profiles will be shared on social media and on The Field blog to celebrate women in landscape architecture who are shaping our environment.

In 2023, we got things started with 9 WILA profiles (see below). Now, we plan to make this an ongoing series, with profiles being shared as they come in.

Submit a WILA profile!

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Sustainability Scores for Landscape Irrigation

by Michael Igo, ASLA, PE, LEED AP

Harvard University’s Science and Engineering Center uses harvested rainwater to irrigate at-grade, streetscape, and green roof plantings. / image: courtesy of Aqueous Consultants

This is the first in a series of articles from the Water Conservation Professional Practice Network (PPN) that will appear here on The Field throughout 2024. The author has presented this original concept to the American Society of Civil Engineers, the Irrigation Association, and ASLA as far back as 2008. This work offers a concept in how to optimize irrigation design under the three dimensions of sustainability: economy, society, and environment.

A Design Meeting Debate

One summer afternoon in Boston, I was at an architect’s office for a design meeting to discuss a new green building project. I was sitting crammed at the end corner of a large conference table strewn with plans, colored pencils, and lunch for a dozen or so of us designers. I sat patiently listening to others while sweltering in what was once an old warehouse. When it was my turn to present our irrigation system design for my client, the project landscape architect, I thought I summarized the irrigation design quite nicely:

  • Irrigation keeps plants healthy in the summer to preserve the architect’s vision.
  • Irrigation also flushes winter salt in streetscapes and prevents soil compaction in high-traffic areas.
  • Weather-based controls save on management costs by automatically applying less water in the spring and fall while shutting down during rain storms.
  • Harvested water pumped from the basement supplies all of our irrigation demand.
  • The savings in purchased municipal water will pay back the slightly higher installation costs in about five years.

Given this design, I feel that this irrigation system is sustainable, even self-sustaining, since:

  • The system uses only non-potable water, saving freshwater for drinking, bathing, and cooking.
  • The system has a positive return on investment (ROI) over its lifecycle versus buying municipal water.
  • The plants remain healthy during the system lifecycle.

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Finish February Strong

The ASLA Conference on Landscape Architecture is coming to Washington, DC, this October 6-9! / image: iStock / Sean Pavone

While there’s a bit more time before ASLA Professional Awards registration is due (the deadline has been extended to March 1), the deadline for ASLA’s Call for Presentations is this Thursday, February 22, and it will not be extended—so if you started a session proposal and haven’t wrapped it up yet, you have two more days to do so!

Besides all that ASLA has going on (have you seen all the webinars we have coming up?), use this week, and next week’s leap day, to get a head start on these other upcoming deadlines, all from ASLA’s RFQs, Opportunities, and Events page:

RFP: East Bayfront Greenway Trail/Park Design – Erie, PA
Deadline: February 22, 2024
A Request for Proposal (RFP) has been released for landscape design services for the East Bayfront Greenway Trail system. This program looks to transform vacant, abandoned lots into vibrant public parks.

Call for Abstracts and Projects for the 2024 International Federation of Landscape Architects (IFLA) World Congress
Deadline: February 26, 2024
The three-day congress—taking place September 4-6 in Istanbul with the theme “Code Red for Earth”—intends to discuss anthropogenic impacts on the Earth system and establish scenarios by forming an action-oriented interaction ground rather than only (re)pointing out the problems.

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Perceptions on the Sustainability of Green Stormwater Infrastructure

by Allison Krausman, Student ASLA

Green infrastructure in Baltimore, Maryland / image: Chesapeake Bay Program via Flickr, CC BY-NC 2.0 DEED

Do you enjoy talking about stormwater drainage? Do you constantly think about where water goes after it rains? I am requesting your assistance in a research study by sharing your thoughts and perceptions on the cultural and technical sustainability of green stormwater infrastructure.

This research centers on the current state of stormwater management professionals’ perception of the effectiveness of long-term maintenance and operations of green infrastructure. I am interested in your experience and opinions on these systems. The goal is to identify gaps between existing literature and everyday application by practitioners. Your input and assistance garnering responses will help us understand the cultural and technical elements that impact stormwater infrastructure’s long-term viability and success.

This survey is anticipated to take 12-15 minutes.

Take the survey >

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Community Groups Going Green in Response to Climate Change

by Arnaldo D. Cardona, ASLA

Native plants outside a church in Vienna, Virginia / image: Kristine Montamat

To promote community awareness of our profession, I have been assisting a church in Richmond, Virginia, in a landscape restoration project. Susan Boze, a church member, invited me to a committee meeting where, to my surprise, I heard terms like landscape restoration, use of native plants, invasive plant control, and climate change. I was excited to hear non-landscape architects talking about these topics with such passion and interest. The group was right on point on these environmental issues, and I shared how all the issues being discussed were closely related to the landscape architecture profession. I suggested they share their activities with the local ASLA Virginia Chapter and as a member, I would support this group’s goal of educating the community by sharing the initiatives that ASLA is diligently promoting.

So, who was this well-informed group? According to Committee Chair Kristine Montamat:

“The Habitat Restoration Group is connected to the Creation Care Committee of the Episcopal Diocese of Virginia. They are all volunteers that started meeting monthly in May 2023. Their focus is to restore the land around our churches, applying the same ideals from local homes and the community. Their members are composed of Master Gardeners (Virginia Tech Extension), Master Naturalists, an Audubon Ambassador, landscape designers, an engineer, and lifelong learners pursuing horticultural knowledge. We are dedicated to learning, spreading awareness, and digging–doing everything we can, with love, to protect the beautiful and essential gifts of nature for future generations.”

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My Meadow Lab, Part 3: The Late Season

by Dan Greenberg, ASLA

Early morning sunlight shining through Andropogon, Carex, and Panicum (left to right) foliage. / image: Dan Greenberg

See Part 1 and Part 2: An Emerging Meadow, in case you missed the previous installments in this three-part series.

After an exciting spring establishing the meadow grasses, summer’s heat arrived in July. The plants in the upper meadow appeared to take this in stride, continuing to push their foliage taller. In several areas the crowns began to overlap and hide the ground below. It was so exciting to see my meadow taking shape!

Bicknell Sedge and Chasmanthium in the upper meadow beginning to grow together; flowers also emerging. / image: Dan Greenberg

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Survey on the Practice of Community Engagement

by Eric Higbee, ASLA, PLA

image: Eric Higbee

Do you work with communities? What community engagement practices do you use most often? How do you decide? What barriers or opportunities are there for doing more “community building” within your community engagement work?

These are some of the questions I hope to answer through my Survey on the Practice of Community Engagement. I am writing to invite you to take the survey. It takes only a few minutes to complete.

Take the survey >

This survey is part of an independent research and writing project. My goal is to garner unique insights into the current practice of community engagement, and with those insights in hand, identify the opportunities to evolve our practices to meet the challenges of our current social era. Stay tuned for a follow-up post in a few months, or sign up for the mailing list through the survey.

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My Meadow Lab, Part 2: An Emerging Meadow

by Dan Greenberg, ASLA

Beautiful Andropogon and Bicknell Sedge in June, but weeds are gaining a foothold. / image: Dan Greenberg

Check out Part 1 in case you missed last week’s opening installment in this three-part series.

The winter was a difficult wait. I had planted 400 square feet of meadow grasses, and an additional 600 square feet of soil lie dormant under cardboard and wood chips. I felt a lot like I did years ago watching my baby daughter sleep—desperately wanting to enjoy her company, but knowing that her rest was best for everyone. My plugs were resting.

The wait wasn’t long. Our winter was warm and wet, so signs of life appeared in late February. It was exciting to see bright green blades pushing through the stiffer stems of last year’s growth! It was also startling, as vigorous weeds took advantage of the plugs’ fertile soils. Chickweed, Bittercress, Henbit, and Deadnettle Lamium (clockwise from top left in the photos below) sprung from every planting hole.

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The Poetics of Remediation: Impressions from the 12th Barcelona Landscape Biennial

by Jordi Barri, International ASLA

Kotchakorn Voraakhom, ASLA, was one of the jurors of the Rosa Barba Casanovas International Landscape Prize 2023. / image: Jordi Barr

Every year I attend the ASLA Conference on Landscape Architecture, wherever it is in the United States. I find it interesting to know what is happening on the other side of the ocean, and what are the trends, novelties, techniques and approaches to landscape projects, through an event full of people and lectures with a didactic focus. But in this article, I will talk about a landscape event that takes place in my city, Barcelona, that has a radically different approach.

The “Barcelona International Landscape Biennial is a bi-annual umbrella complex project, integrating both Professional and School prizes, topic-based Symposium, Catalogues and Exhibitions as a creative medium where practitioners, academics and students interested in Landscape Architecture would network, learn and debate”—this is how the Biennial defines itself.

“The Poetics of Remediation” served as the captivating motto for the 12th edition of the Barcelona International Biennial of Landscape Architecture, which took place last November, and invited landscape professionals for a showcase of awards, lectures, and exhibitions. With this edition, it’s already been 25 years since it was created.

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My Meadow Lab, Part 1

by Dan Greenberg, ASLA

Stepping stones in the meadow. / image: Dan Greenberg

My meadow is modest by most design standards. But it’s an awesome 1,000 square foot experiment that is already welcoming birds every day.

How awesome? In one Raleigh, North Carolina, growing season, measured from April through November, and compared against the lawn industry’s standard practices for managing a healthy turf lawn, my meadow saved over 10,000 gallons of water, 6 gallons of gasoline, some engine oil, 8 pounds of lawn seeds, and 9 pounds of fertilizer / pre-emergent herbicide. It also saved me 30 hours of boredom, walking back and forth with a mower or a seed spreader.

My anticipation is already building for next year. The established grasses will grow larger, shade more weeds, and welcome more creatures. And my role will change from a farmer to a steward, a master to a friend.

This meadow is special to me for a number of reasons. I love nature and this brings a piece of it closer to my life. It lets me walk my talk as an environmentalist and landscape architect. And it eliminates a lot of wasted time and resources.

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New Opportunities Round Up

ASLA 2023 Professional Analysis and Planning Honor Award. Reimagine Middle Branch Plan. Baltimore, Maryland. Field Operations / image: Field Operations and the Reimagine Middle Branch Planning Team

While it is often remarked that January can feel like an awfully long month (where are we at now? Day 45?), you can use these never-ending days of mostly inclement weather to prepare for February and its super-abundance of ASLA webinars and deadlines, from the ASLA Honors Call for Nominations closing on February 12, to the ASLA Conference Call for Presentations deadline on February 22 and the ASLA Professional Awards registration and payment deadline on February 23. There’s a lot to prep for, as we try to stay cozy indoors!

To explore other opportunities, beyond all that ASLA has going on, check out ASLA’s RFQs, Opportunities, and Events page for information on everything from RFPs to calls for papers and design competitions. Below are just a few of the recent submissions. Anyone who would like to share an opportunity may submit information online.

Harvard & the Legacy of Slavery: Memorial Project Request for Qualifications
Deadline: February 20, 2024
The Harvard & the Legacy of Slavery (H&LS) Memorial Project Committee invites artists, designers, architects, multi-disciplinary teams, and other creators to express their interest in conceiving a site or sites on Harvard’s Cambridge campus for commemoration and reflection, as well as for listening to and living with the University’s legacy of slavery. The Committee seeks expressions of interest from those with investments of thought and practice in memorialization, ritual, community-building, history, and questions about the future, and welcomes submissions from individuals, collaboratives, and teams rooted in traditional or non-traditional memorial practices at any stage of their career.

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The 2024 HALS Challenge Competition

by Scott Keyes

Grandma Prisbrey’s Bottle Village, HALS CA-42, Simi Valley, Ventura County, CA / image: Library of Congress, Prints and Photographs Division

About the Historic American Landscapes Survey

The Historic American Landscapes Survey (HALS) is a national program administered by the National Park Service in collaboration with the American Society of Landscape Architects and Library of Congress. HALS documents historic landscapes through the creation of measured drawings, large-format photographs, and historical reports. Documentation is archived in the permanent collections of the Library of Congress.

The 15th Annual HALS Challenge Competition

The annual HALS Challenge competition encourages landscape architects, students, and other interested parties to document historic landscapes in their communities. To enter the competition, participants must complete a historical report that highlights the history, significance, and character-defining features of the surveyed landscape. This report can be supplemented with measured drawings or large-format photographs. All competition entries are archived in the HALS collection at the Library of Congress where they contribute to the nation’s largest repository of documentation on American architecture, engineering, and landscapes.

The 15th annual HALS Challenge competition is an open competition. We invite landscape architects, historians, students, and other interested parties to document any landscape that you feel would make a good addition to the HALS collection. Historic landscapes encompass a vast array of diverse property types and places, from formal gardens, parks, and public spaces to traditional cultural places, vernacular communities, and residential districts. Regardless of the site selected, please focus your HALS report on the landscape as a whole. Information how to describe and analyze historic landscapes for the HALS collection can be found in the HALS History Guidelines.

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125 Years of ASLA

image: ASLA

In case anyone has not already heard the big news, 2024 marks ASLA’s 125th anniversary! Since its founding on January 4, 1899, the American Society of Landscape Architects (ASLA) has continuously championed the field of landscape architecture. Let’s honor this historic milestone together—share your favorite ASLA memories and moments as we commemorate ASLA’s legacy and work towards a greener future for the next 125 years.

Share Your ASLA Memories >

We would love to see a few Professional Practice Network (PPN)-related stories come in! Have you been involved with your PPN since they were known as Open Committees or Professional Interest Groups (PIGs)? Were you at the very first Women in Landscape Architecture Walk back in 2009? Do you have a vintage printed PPN newsletter incorporated into your 1990s-era ASLA scrapbook? We want to hear about it!

Plus, a friendly reminder in case you are especially keen on participating in ASLA’s conference as a speaker or honors and awards program this year in celebration of ASLA’s 125th: the calls for all these opportunities are open now!

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