Landscape Architecture
Landscape Architecture
Landscape Architecture
Architecture
AN INTRODUCTION
Published in 2014 by
Laurence King Publishing Ltd
361373 City Road
London EC1V 1LR
United Kingdom
email: enquiries@laurenceking.com
www.laurenceking.com
text 2014 Robert Holden & Jamie Liversedge
All rights reserved. No part of this publication may be reproduced or
transmitted in any form or by any means, electronic or mechanical,
including photocopy, recording or any information storage and
retrieval system, without prior permission in writing from the publisher.
Robert Holden and Jamie Liversedge have asserted their right under
the Copyright, Designs, and Patents Act 1988, to be identied as the
Authors of this Work.
A catalogue record for this book is available from the British Library.
ISBN: 978 1 78067 270 0
Design: Michael Lenz, Draught Associates
Senior editor: Peter Jones
Printed in China
Landscape
Architecture
AN INTRODUCTION
Robert Holden & Jamie Liversedge
Contents
Introduction
What is a landscape architect?
How this book is structured
13
17
20
24
28
29
30
32
36
38
44
46
54
2. Beginning a Project
The brief
Types of client
Case study: Westergasfabriek Park, Amsterdam
Fees: how to get paid
Case study: Central Park, New York City
Site survey
Case study: Thames Barrier Park, London
58
65
66
68
70
72
74
78
86
88
104
106
108
112
116
119
122
Digital design
Building Information Modelling (BIM)
Mapping, air photography, satellite imagery and Geographic Information Systems (GIS)
Report writing
Live presentations
Case study: Villa Garden at Aphrodite Hills, Cyprus
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128
129
130
134
136
138
140
141
147
148
152
156
163
164
165
166
168
170
7. The Future
A changing environment
Some challenges
Case study: The Dutch National Water Plan
Case study: Floating Gardens, Shad Thames, London
Case study: Korail, Dhaka, Bangladesh
Case study: North Holland coastline, the Netherlands
Recycling and everyday practice
Final thoughts
174
177
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182
186
190
192
194
Glossary
Bibliography
Index
Picture credits
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199
204
208
Introduction
What is a landscape architect?
How this book is structured
13
17
S PA C E
TIME
E CO L OGIC AL/
H E A LT H
H U MAN/S O CIAL
VISUAL &
S PAT I A L
SE T TING
C U LT U R A L /
N AT U R A L H I STO R Y
POLITICAL/
R E G U L ATO R Y
T R A N S P O R T/
C I R C U L ATO R Y
I N F R A ST R U C T U R E/
U TILITIES
10
Introduction
11
13
GN
LA
IN
SI
N
G
DE
LANDSCAPE
ARCHITEC TU RE
MANAG EMEN T
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16
17
1
The History of Landscape
Architecture: Changing
Practices and Concerns
Beginnings
The growth of landscape architecture as a profession
The growth of the profession in Europe
The expansion of the profession worldwide
Case study: Painshill Park, Surrey, UK
Planning
City planning and structural green space
Changing styles: from Modernism to Postmodernism and beyond
Case study: Emscher Park, Ruhr Valley, Germany
Changing priorities: ecology, biodiversity and sustainability
Case study: Ijsselmeerpolders, the Netherlands
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44
46
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Beginnings
Gardening is an ancient activity, which
began as soon as man started living in
towns. The cultivation of plants was
the major step in mankinds move from
nomadic hunting and cattle herding to
agricultural settlement, which involved
people living together in larger groups.
Garden design is both a popular activity
and an aspect of aristocratic and
leisured wealth. Mesopotamian culture
developed the idea of the park, which
was to give rise in the Middle Ages to
both the hunting ground and the royal
park and later, in the nineteenth century,
to the public municipal park. Egyptian
and Roman civilizations also fostered
parks and gardens. In towns, the latter
were courtyards enclosed by houses;
in the countryside they became a series
of enclosed spaces usually organized
as outdoor rooms.
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24
BOSTON COMMON
N
CH
HARLES RIVER
PU
UBLIC GARDEN
CO
OMMONWEA
ALTH AVENUE MALL
BACK B
BAY FENS
RIVERWAY
Y
OLMSTE
S T D PARK
ST
JAMAICA POND
FRAN
NKLIN PARK
ARNOLD ARB
BOR
RETU
UM
NORTH
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Planning
Historically, landscape planning has
aimed to reconcile human development
with the ecological, cultural and
geographical features of the landscape.
This has been done largely by the
protection of specially valued areas.
Until recently, its role was largely
conservationist and limited. However,
this has changed in the past half-century
so that landscape planning has become
much more proactive, mapping and
promoting the whole landscape
rather than just exclusive, already
protected areas.
Illustrative of the conservationist or
protectionist approach are the American
A
32
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34
Vocation urbaine
Vocation naturelle
espace agricole
espace de loisirs
Infrastructures de transport
Fleuve et espaces en eau
Rseau routier:
existant
trac
Aroport - arodrome
principe de liaison
principe de liaison long terme
(prservation de faisabilit)
Limite de commune
in
ac
Tr
Pr
de
Ex
Transport collectif:
ista
nt
cipe
lia
ison
nouveau franchissement
LGV
liaison vers aroport
RER
rseau ferroviaire voyageur
Arc Express (fuseau dtude)
mtro
tram - train et train lger
transport collectif en site
propre sur voirie
35
36
1 The History of Landscape Architecture City planning and structural green space
37
MODERNISM TO POSTMODERN
AND BEYOND
39
LA VILLETTE TO LANDSCAPE
URBANISM
Perhaps the most signicant and
inuential design of the past thirty
years is the Office of Metropolitan
Architectures entry for the Parc de La
Villette competition in Paris in 198283.
It won second prize and so wasnt
actually built. Nonetheless, its parallelstripe plan form has reverberated through
the landscape design of the past few
decades, as can be seen in Robert
Townshends linear urban design for
the More London office development
in London (1999) or more recently
Michel Corajouds Cour du Maroc
park in Paris (20057). Corajoud worked
on the original La Villette design with
OMA. The OMA La Villette design was
avowedly more about programmatic
ideas than a style.
It established arbitrary ways of structuring
the park, such as contrasting strips each
50m wide, in turn subdivisible by 5m
widths. The idea of sharp contrasts in a
plan comes from Rem Koolhaass student
dissertation on the Berlin Wall. The aim
was to establish an architectural structure
for a programme which to quote OMA
combines a programmatic instability
with architectural specicity (which)
will eventually generate a park.
Post-industrial landscapes have been
discussed in relation to landscape and
urban design since the 1980s. Since this
point there has been a fresh appreciation
of the value of the products of industry
and its cultural and historical importance
together with the ecological value of the
derelict sites which became vegetated
naturally. In his account of his High Line
urban park in New York (2003), landscape
architect James Corner describes:
the post-industrial railroad character
of the site the rail tracks, the
linearity, and the fact that it really is
a thin, narrow ribbon The entire
High Line really cuts through blocks
and buildings, and I sought to create
a distinct juxtaposition where there is
this green ribbon existing against the
stoic grid of the city There is also
this almost sad, melancholic, silence
that permeates the place We wanted
to give people the feeling that
theyve come across a secret, magic
garden in the sky.
40
A. Jardin dEole, Paris, designed by Michel Corajoud using a stripes theme and
inuenced by the OMA La Villette competition entry of 20 years earlier.
B. Parc de La Villette competition, the OMA entry of 1982, with the stripes or
horizontal bands designating different activities.
C. More London, London: the same parallel linearity is found in Robert Townshends
design designed 20 years after the 198283 La Villette competition.
D. The High Line, New York: the way up.
E. The High Line, New York: created on a disused railway viaduct.
F. The High Line, New York: it straddles the streets of Manhattans West Side.
G. The High Line, New York: with gardens in the sky.
H. The High Line, New York: offering a refuge and a prospect.
1 The History of Landscape Architecture Changing styles
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NG
F UN
NSUMER
OTI
A
N
IC
MAL
U
P ROD
ST
SUB
OX
CARBON
CO
NME
IRO
ENV
ANI
NIT ROG EN
A BI
IS
LS
IN
At a much larger scale there are biomes,
which are globally signicant groups of
ecosystems the Mediterranean biome
is one such. Habitat refers to the physical
environment in which a community
of ecosystems may develop, whether
mountain-top alpine habitats, marshlands
or chalk grasslands. A biotope is the
habitat of a biological community: for
instance, a tropical rainforest. A biotope
may be articial for example, a roof
garden can create a habitat for nesting
birds. By contrast, a niche is the physical
environment of a single species.
50
NT
GY
RI
MINE RALS
ORGAN
LO
TI
C
O
EC
TS
ANIMA
HUMANS
TE
REDUC
ER
LA
GI BAC
BI
R
UR
OU
I
ND
ECOSYSTEM COMPONENTS
N
LA
TS
ANC
YG
EN
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2
Beginning a Project
The brief
Types of client
Case study: Westergasfabriek Park, Amsterdam
Fees: how to get paid
Case study: Central Park, New York City
Site survey
Case study: Thames Barrier Park, London
58
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66
68
70
72
74
This chapter sets out the initial stages of any landscape architecture
project, beginning with the brief and proceeding through the positives
and negatives of working with particular types of client, the various ways
of estimating costs and the kinds of information that need to be gathered
in a site survey. All of this work precedes the actual business of making
a design, which will be covered in the next chapter.
The brief
A project begins formally with the brief,
a description of the services the
consultant is to provide for the client.
This might be a one-page sheet or it
might be a much longer document.
Often clients may not know quite what
they want or what a landscape architect
can do; in such cases, the brief is often
the result of a series of discussions
between landscape architect and client.
On the other hand, the client may have
a great deal of commissioning experience
and come up with a brief with little prior
consultation.
The extent of the landscape architects
role will depend on their capabilities
and on the project. Usually, however,
the landscape architect will undertake
the design and specication of the
following for a building or engineering
development:
58
W H AT:
COMPONEN TS
W H Y:
PHILOSOPH Y
A GOOD
BRIEF
D ESC RIBES
H O W:
D E LIVE R AB L ES
W H E N:
P ROGRAMME
59
60
sourcing of plants;
design and specication of planting;
design and specication of topsoil
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Types of client
The context within which landscape
architecture is carried out varies
according to the ways in which
economies and administrative policies
change. Hence, landscape gardeners
in the eighteenth century worked for
individual patrons; nowadays public
and corporate clients are the norm.
Clients vary and may be categorized
as follows:
PRIVATE INDIVIDUALS (say, for a garden
or estate or private house) can make the
most challenging clients, especially if they
are not used to construction and delays
caused due to weather or late supply of
materials. However, private clients can
also be the most understanding, not
necessarily wanting an instant result, and
instead being prepared to wait for longerterm outcomes. The work can also be the
most satisfying because you are providing
a personal service, and you can transform
their personal outdoor environment.
PRIVATE SECTOR DEVELOPERS: these
may be industrial or leisure companies
developing sites for their own occupation
or may be real-estate developers of
housing or offices or retail space,
whether on a short-term speculative or
longer-term basis. Real-estate developers
may well have predetermined briefs and
established ways of working that one
has to comply with and that might prove
problematic. Some of the best private
developers are the landed estates, such
as colleges or pension funds with a longterm interest in the land. For example,
it was the private developer at Canary
Wharf in Londons Docklands who
wanted a strong masterplan and
a high-quality environment.
CENTRAL AND LOCAL GOVERNMENT,
which will usually be like private
developers in having predetermined
ways of working. Often they make
for challenging clients because their
working methods can unduly limit design
exibility. One typical example would
THE COMMONS
One issue for landscape architecture is
that so much of its work involves what
economists term common goods or
commons. Traditionally common land
or alpine pastures and tropical forests
(communally owned and shared) were
seen as common goods. However, the
denition is being extended to areas such
as oceans, or Antarctica, clean air and
water, or silence. Arguably the clean-up
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FEES
There are three main ways of charging
for consultancy work: time, percentage
and lump sum.
TIME CHARGES can be at an agreed
hourly, daily or weekly rate for each grade
or individual member of staff, including
principals, and will vary depending on
staff experience and responsibilities.
There should also be review dates,
especially for long projects and in times
of high ination fees can be indexlinked. Index linking involves relating
agreed fees to an agreed price index
whether cost of living, national wage
levels or construction industry costs
so the rise is in line with ination over
the months and years. Time charges
(which might be to a pre-agreed limit)
are particularly appropriate for earlystage work or for desk studies such as
environmental assessment or landscape
planning work. They are a secure way
of assessing fees.
PERCENTAGE FEES relate to the value of
the work and are usually a percentage
of the total cost of a contract or
subcontract for which the landscape
consultant is responsible. For instance,
a 1,000,000 landscape project might
require 510 per cent fees which would
be 50,000100,000. Alternatively it
might be a much lower percentage, say
0.5 to 10 per cent, of the total capital
cost of the whole project, particularly if
the landscape architect is advising on the
location and orientation of buildings or
the masterplan framework for road and
other engineering work. Percentage fees
generally also vary with the complexity
of the type of work and the size of the
capital sum. Lower-value projects rate a
greater percentage of the total value in
fees; greater complexity likewise justies
a larger percentage fee. For example,
golf courses, country parks and forestry
schemes are generally considered less
complex, while urban design or historic
landscape conservation are considered
the most complex. Most landscape
architecture professional bodies have
guidelines for percentage fees.
WORK
STAGE
PROPORTION
OF FEE
TOTAL
FEE
Inception
N/A
N/A
Feasibility
N/A
N/A
Outline proposals
15%
15%
15%
30%
Detailed proposals
15%
45%
F/G
20%
65%
H/J
5%
70%
Construction
25%
95%
Completion
5%
100%
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Site survey
Knowledge of site is the basis of
landscape architecture and it should be
gained by both direct observation and
research into records and published
plans; in this way, an understanding
can be built up that is both factual and
emotional. It is essential to walk a site,
experience it at different times of day
and year, and record its elements. Ideally
one should also sleep on the site, though
this is not entirely usual practice but on
the one occasion we slept on a site, we
won the international design competition.
72
SITE ELEMENTS
TO BE RECORDED
POL L U TION
VIEWS
M I C R O C L I M AT E
CHARAC TE R
C I R C U L AT I O N & A C C E S S
B O UNDAR IES
F L O R A & FA U N A
SE RVICES &
U TILITIES
LAND USE
DRAINAG E
G E O L OG Y & S OILS
LANDFORM
A
ZERKALNY
THEATRE
HERMITAGE THEATRE
A
ITS
UL
SHOO
H
TING
T
TI
I
GAL
A LERY
RY
RY
IAD
YR
TN
RE
KA
OPEN AIR
A THE
T ATRE
CHES
H S CL
C UB
UB
STAG
AGE
AG
G BOX
SPHERE THEAT
AT
TRE
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3
The Design Process
Developing a design
Case study: Aphrodite Hills, Cyprus
The principles of design
Case study: Hedeland Arena, Roskilde, Denmark
Human flow and natural change
Case study: Marketplace and Waterfront, Odda, Norway
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88
104
106
108
This chapter reviews design process and its basic elements such as
the signicance of site, of inspiration, hierarchy and human scale and
human ow and natural change. It describes the ve components that
a landscape architect deals with, discusses ideas such as hierarchy,
symmetry and asymmetry, national attitudes to landscape, human scale,
linearity, colour, form and texture, and ideas of process and change.
Developing a design
The design process is the sequence
of steps that a designer undertakes
when responding to a commission.
Sometimes this is logical, sometimes
more intuitive and sometimes
pragmatic. The sequence includes
such things as design methods, skills
and inspiration, which together form
a focused programme of action.
General approaches to a brief might be
simplied as falling into two categories:
problem-based and solution-based.
For example, a business park proposal
might be framed in a problem-based
manner: it has so much oorspace,
with a predetermined road access
network and a range of buildings with
a similarly predetermined number of
car park spaces related to oorspace
(e.g. one car parking space/20m2 of
building oorspace). This helps dene
the consequent approach to the
open space design, such as whether
to provide wet balancing ponds (to
D ESIG
N P ROCES
CLIEN T
BRIEF
D ESIG N M E TH OD S AC T IO N S,
E V E N T S O R ST E P S ,
S U B-P ROCESS ES
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COMPLE TED
P ROJ EC T
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GENIUS LOCI
A U D I TO R Y
VISUAL
F L O R A + FA U N A
SMELL
S U R FA C E S
B U I LT
FORM
TA ST E
EPHEMERAL
CON TEN T
LANDFORM
SENSORY
W AT E R
P H Y SICAL
UNIQ
UENE
SS
G ENIUS LOCI
C U LT U R A L
CONDITIONING
E X P E C TAT I O N
MEMORY
L EARNING & MY TH
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DESIGN SKILLS
These may be summarized as:
thinking;
problem solving;
research;
design;
communication.
drawings;
models;
visualizations and walk-throughs;
envisioning.
DESIGN SKILLS
ME THODS
SKILLS
P ROCESS
D ESIG N IS
A COMPLEX
D I S C I P L I N E T H AT
C O M BI N E S . . .
I N S P I R AT I O N
CON TEN T
CON TEX T
83
DESIGN APPROACHES
H I STO R I C A L L AY E R S / PA L I M P S E ST S
DEVELOPMEN T
F RAMEWORK
P R A G M AT I C- L I N E A R-R AT I O N A L
S U STA I N A B I L I T Y
D ESIG N
AP P ROACH E
S
ST Y L I ST I C
C O M M U N I T Y- B A S E D
PAT T E R N L A N G U A G E
ECOL OGICAL
I N T U I T I V E/G E N I U S L O C I
P O ST-I N D U ST R I A L
H O L I ST I C
84
A L L E G O R Y & N A R R AT I V E
D E S I G N W I T H N AT U R E
PAT T E R N M A K I N G
INSPIRATION
This comes from all sorts of sources,
and is usually a product of our wider
lives, meaning the society in which
one lives, the education one has had,
cultural interests, etc. Clearly people
living in dense urban areas, or countries
with high population densities where
land is much scarcer, tend to have
different attitudes to people in more
rural or less populated areas.
INSPIRATION
SCIENCE &
M AT H E M AT I C S
M Y T H, L E G E N D
& FOLKLORE
THE SEASONS
L O V E & H AT E
E V E R Y D AY L I F E
B I R T H - D E AT H
T H E N AT U R A L
WORLD
I N S P I R AT I O N
ACCID EN T
PHILOSOPHY
M USIC AND
THE AR T S
L I T E R AT U R E
85
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87
88
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90
HIERARCHY
Hierarchy in landscape design relates to
the way elements are arranged to make
some more dominant than others say,
the main streets of a town or the paths
through a park. Hierarchical organization
is a fundamental aspect of landscape
design. Spaces may be sequenced and
made dominant by means of their shape
and size or by arranging their proximity
to an entrance or transport node or by
placing them on a symmetrical axis.
The language used to describe designs
may be broadly geometric (grid, axis,
radial, orthogonal, centre) but common
metaphors also relate to animal and plant
structures (spine, head, arm, arterial,
nger, node, branch, trunk) and clothing
(belt, skirt).
91
orientation-giving landmarks.
Redevelopment in the 1950s-70s
was often highway engineer-led and
resulted in the loss of pleasant, pedestrian
friendly urban spaces. The growth of
motor-car traffic in towns has tended to
fragment the continuity of the enclosing
buildings, roads have been widened
and yovers have cut across streets. In
consequence, many urban spaces have
now lost denition: town centres have
become dominated by car parks and
inner ring roads. Furthermore, buildingplot sizes have tended to become bigger,
so limiting exibility of use and promoting
uniformity of street frontage which has
consequently become less interesting.
Perhaps the ultimate formal expression
of this loss of urbanism or anti-urbanism
is the town of Milton Keynes in southern
England (see pp.14849), which was
planned around car-based travel, and
where each grid square of housing or
commercial development is hidden
by surrounding tree-planted mounds
(Milton Keynes is organized within
a 1km-wide loose grid of roads).
GR ID
PA N H A N D L E/
LOOP
C
MAGIC WAND
R ADIAL
92
CONCEN T R IC
RING S
F I G U R E O F E I G H T/
DOUBLE LOOP
93
95
96
A.
B.
C.
D.
E.
F.
G.
H.
I.
97
98
99
100
A.
B.
C.
D.
E.
F.
G.
101
HUE
COLOUR
INORGANIC OR
H U M AN-M AD E
VISUAL
TE
OBJECT
FO
UR
XT
E
N AT U R E O F T H E
S U R FA C E
T H R E E-D I M E N S I O N A L I T Y
O R G A N I C O R N AT U R A L
TA C T I L E
L E AV E S
F LOWERS
BARK
AU TUMN
COLOURS
F RUIT
COLOUR
G E OM E T R IC
LEAF
UR
XT
FORMAL
FO
TE
T RACERY
CLIP P ED
HEDGE
INFORMAL
H E I G H T, W I D T H,
LENGTH
T WIG
N AT U R A L
HEDG E ROW
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103
104
Rising out of the middle of the gravelworking site are a ski-slope mountain by
Lea Nrgaard & Vibeke Holscher and a
great arena of bright, green grass terraces
which Is the brainchild of Erik Juhl, who
is director of I/S Hedeland. The intensely
green and formal landform contrasts
with the loose piles of sorted gravel. The
new outdoor arena has a red and white
pre-cast concrete circular performance
area backed by a strip of white gravel,
which marks the area off from the gravel
works behind. It accommodates 3,500
spectators and performances include
pop, classical and ballet. One-metrehigh, 45-degree grass sloped terraces
rise 20m above the red and white circle
in a great arc. A mound at the top of the
terraces controls access and entry is
via gatehouses built of turf and timber.
Beyond and on axis are toilet blocks, also
turf-walled and -roofed, and on either
side are circular gravel areas laid out
cheaply for car parking and screened by
grass mounds and fastigiate tree planting.
The arc of the arena is marked by radial
timber-edged steps which rise to the
gatehouses; these radial lines emphasize
the symmetry of the design. Made from
industrial materials, this is an exquisitely
simple and economical design (total cost:
270,000) that uses its surroundings
rather than rejects them.
105
106
G
H
107
A. Bjrbekk & Lindheims Odda Marketplace: the plan is simple and minimalistic,
with bands of different tones of granite, the detailing is essential to the art. The
marketplace is like a stage setting for the people to animate, bringing light and
colour into the foreground.
108
B. The marketplace looks out over the Hardanger Fjord. The fjord is at the rear
of the scene, the mountains form the backdrop.
C. Superbly detailed granite stonework.
D. The boardwalk with benches backing onto windbreaks which capture the sun.
E. Odda waterfront consists of a marketplace at the centre of town, with granite
paving, a boardwalk, and asphalt surrounds, and constitutes simple and
effective place-making.
F. The quayside marketplace, formerly a car park.
3 Case study Marketplace and Waterfront, Odda, Norway
109
4
Representing the
Landscape Design
Drawing and sketchbooks
Case study: School Courtyard, London
3D modelling and video
Photography
Digital design
Building Information Modelling (BIM)
Mapping, air photography, satellite imagery and
Geographic Information Systems (GIS)
Report writing
Live presentations
Case study: Villa Garden at Aphrodite Hills, Cyprus
112
116
119
122
123
124
125
128
129
130
The way you represent your design work has a huge impact on its
development and reception. Learning how to draw well, for instance, helps
you to convey your ideas more effectively to others. This chapter looks at
some of the manual and computerized techniques that landscape architects
use to represent their designs. We also look at digital data handling such as
BIM (Building Information Modelling), and Geographic Information Systems,
as well as map making and end with a few words on report writing, because
landscape architecture can involve much desk study.
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113
114
115
116
117
A.
B.
C.
D.
E.
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119
121
Photography
Photography is an important way of
establishing a survey record, particularly
in relation to panoramic views and
permits an easily accessible, up-to-date
office record of a site. Photography
can be digitally manipulated to produce
before-and-after images, a key aspect
in the visualization of the effects of
development on an existing site. More
often Photoshop is used to produce
at, cut-out representations. But 3D
digital design offers better opportunities
for producing effective and convincing
before-and-after images. Air photography
is also useful as a historical record.
It dates back to the 1920s.
122
Digital design
Digital design or Computer-aided
Design (CAD), is the standard drawing
technique used in offices in the
development and construction industry
today. Over the last 30 years it has
replaced many of the traditional manual
(analogue) representation techniques
as the preferred method for producing
diagrams, orthographic plans, sections,
elevations, projections (axonometric
and isometric) and perspectives.
As a technique, it is highly efficient
and editable.
However, to use digital tools and
techniques creatively, one must rst gain
an understanding of the fundamentals
of drawing and develop a systematic
design process. There are many different
ways to accomplish the same task using
different kinds of software. Indeed, many
software programs directly replicate
manual techniques and processes. But
often it is still quicker and more natural
to use manual rendering and sketching
techniques at certain stages of a project.
There is also the possibility of creating
hybrid representations that combine
manual and digital techniques, giving
the designer innumerable ways to create
non-standard representational forms.
In most offices, the design work follows
a pattern using two-dimensional layout
drawings initially and, for presentation,
3D model work subsequently rendered
in Photoshop. But digital design offers
much more than that and comes into
its own when it is three-dimensionally
based. A 3D design model can be
fully explored by the generation of
animations and sequences that show
RASTER-BASED SOFTWARE:
So what is the primary digital design
software for landscape architecture?
The choice includes vector-based,
raster-based, solid-modelling, video and
animation, vector-GIS and raster-GIS
software. A true digital design enthusiast
would master all six types of program
but, on the downside, this might leave
little time to develop expertise in design.
VECTOR-BASED SOFTWARE:
CAD is probably the most widely used
landscape graphic software at the
present time. AutoCAD, the market
leader in its eld, originated as a program
for architectural drafting and has since
developed in many directions. There are
bolt-on additions tailored for plumbing
designers, circuit designers, structural
engineers and landscape architects.
There is also a GIS bolt-on.
Vector graphics are a scalable format
composed of individual objects made
up of mathematical calculations. Vector
images can be resized easily without
loss of quality, making them an ideal
format for initial design. Vector graphics,
however, do tend to have an articial
appearance. They are point-based
123
3D
Objects/
3DParametric
parametricSmart
smart
objectsComponents
/
contain
Information
rich BIM
Content from
Components
contain
informationsuppliers and manufacturers
BIM content
BIM Content
Physical data
Physical data
Material Properties
Material properties
Appearance
Longevity
Appearance
Maintenance data
Longevity Supply Cost and Lead in Data
Manufacturers
Details
Maintenance
data
Supply cost and lead-in data
Manufacturers details
BIM
also
includes
BIMcontent
content
also
includes:
Geospatial data
GeospatialCoordinate
data
Geographic
Data
Enables
Enablesfull
fullcollaborative
collaborative
coordination with all design
coordination
with
all design
and
construction
disciplines
Schemes
can be tested
and
and construction
disciplines
run as simulations
Data
Data from
fromBIM
BIMcontent
content
objects can be extracted to
objects
can be specifications
extracted to
form
schedules,
and
documentation
formcontract
schedules,
specications
Visualisations can
Visualizations
canbe
be
accurately generated from
accurately
generated from
model content
model content
125
GEOGRAPHIC INFORMATION
SYSTEMS (GIS)
GIS is a computerized, topographically
based dataset rst developed in the
1960s in Canada by Dr Roger Tomlinson,
a geographer and geologist, for the
federal Department of Forestry and
Rural Development. This was followed
up from 1965 by work at the Laboratory
for Computer Graphics at the Harvard
Graduate School of Design headed
by the architect Howard Fisher. Jack
Dangermond, a landscape architect,
joined the team in 1967 and aided in
developing SYMAP (Synteny Mapping
and Analysis Program), which is basically
a mapping visualization tool. Later
Dangermond set up the GIS software
company Environmental Systems
Research Institute (ESRI) to further
develop GIS. As of 2012, ESRI offers:
ArcView, an easy-to-use program;
ArcInfo, a more sophisticated program;
and ArcGIS, which permits the addition
of additional modules to increase
functionality. GIS data is expressed as:
A
ANALYSING AVERY HILL PARK, LONDON
Historical vs Current
Analysis
(Overlaying aerial
image with OS
Historic Map 1854
and site boundary
shape layer)
Topographical Analysis
(Derived from DTM/TIN,
overlayed with
OS colour raster,
hillshade analysis
and contours)
Site boundary
Site boundary
Contour_1m
Contour_5m
3D Data (ArcScene)
Data Analysis
Slope
degrees
0-1
2-2
3-4
Coniferous trees
5-8
Culverts
9-18
Water
Trees, scrub
Buildings on site
126
4 Representing the Landscape Design Mapping, air photography, satellite imagery and Geographic Information Systems (GIS)
127
Report writing
Reports are a staple of the design
process and report writing is an essential
skill for landscape architects and, indeed,
all design professionals. A reports aim
is to inform as clearly and as briey as
possible. As such it should be written in
an appropriately formal and analytical
style, be clearly organized (with an
introduction, main text and conclusion)
and presented, and have been
carefully proofread.
A report should generally include the
following elements:
letter of transmittance, describing the
purpose and contents of the report,
and explaining by whom and when
it was commissioned;
title page;
table of contents;
list of abbreviations and/or glossary;
executive summary/abstract;
introduction;
body of text;
conclusion;
recommendations for action;
bibliography;
appendices.
Avoid:
the inclusion of careless, inaccurate,
irrelevant or conicting data;
mixing facts and opinions without
making a clear distinction between
the two;
unsupported conclusions and
recommendations;
careless presentation and
proofreading;
beginning with negatives.
Landscape
p and Biodiversityy
67
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TREE SCHEDULE
Latin name
Acer campestre Elsrijk
Acer ginnala
Alnus glutinosa Laciniata
Alnus incana Aurea
Alnus incana Laciniata
Betula albosinensis Fascination
Planting is designed to allow clear sightlines for security and supervision.
Betula pendula
Betula pubescens
The development of the planting palette is guided by the school requirements Betula utilis jacquemontii
for species that are non-toxic, whether ingested or handled, ideally where
Carpinus betulus Fastigiata
possible non-fruiting, non-thorny and free from sharp leaf or stem edges,
Liquidambar styraciua Stella
resilient to damage and easily maintained.
Pinus sylvestris
Quercus robur Fastigiata
Plants will be selected so any seasonal foliage or ora effects will happen
Sorbus aria Lutescens
during term time and contain a high proportion of evergreen plants to give
a clear planting structure. Planting will be selected to complement the
CLIMBER SCHEDULE
curriculum requirements including their sensory qualities, their ability to
Latin name
attract wildlife, and provide a range of opportunities for a varied learning
Clematis armandii
experience,
Clematis vitalba
Hedera hibernica
The proposed planting palette is comprised of mainly native tree, shrub,
Hydrangea petiolaris
groundcover and grass species with a number of naturalized, ornamental and Jasminum officinale
sensory species proposed to enhance visual amenity.
Lonicera henryi
Lonicera periclymenum
Plant material will be sourced locally.
Parthenocissus tricuspidata
Veitchii
95
2 0 .8
8 16
04 Planting Concept
04.1 Principles
Due to the constrictive nature of the site planting has been focused into three
main areas: the lockable enclosed sensory-style experiential gardens, the
living roof and the third is the Prince George Road frontage. Each of the
garden areas is located to create a natural backdrop to views out of the
classrooms and to catch available sunlight to ensure successful
establishment, and are seen as explorative resources for small supervised
groups of pupils.
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New Horizon SEN School./ Full Planning Application- Landscape and Biodiversity
128
Page 5
Live presentations
As a landscape architect, you will
regularly nd yourself in the position
of having to persuade other people,
such as developers and funders, to
provide the money to allow you to
realize your dreams. This may be as
part of an original competitive bidding
for a project commission, followed by
presentations at design reviews and
amplied by public presentations as
part of community participation and
community design workshops. You
will need to convince boards, planning
authorities and nanciers, not to mention
whole communities, that what you are
proposing is the best way forward. This
requires you to have clear, persuasive
ideas and also the capacity to convey
them. The ability to stand in front of a
committee and argue your case clearly
129
131
5
From Design Team to
Long-term Landscape
Management
The stages of work
Case study: London 2012 Olympic Park
Multi-disciplinary design teams
The programme of work and the design team
Costing a project
Landscape management
Case study: The Parks Trust, Milton Keynes, UK
Case study: Dr Jac. P. Thijssepark, Amstelveen, the Netherlands
134
136
138
140
141
147
148
152
2
3A
3B
3C
4
5
PRELIMINARY SERVICES
A
B
A/B Preparation
C/D/E Design
F/G/H Pre-construction
J/K Construction
L Use
Inception
Feasibility
STANDARD SERVICES
C
D
E
F/G
H
J
K
L
Outline proposals
Scheme proposals
Detailed proposals
Production information and bills
of quantities
Tender action
Contract preparation
Construction
Completion
1 5%
F EES
134
20%
F EES
20%
F EES
20%
F EES
20%
F EES
C O M P L E T IO N
T E N D E R A C T IO N
C O N ST R U C T IO N
P RO D U C T IO N
IN F O R M AT IO N A N D
BI L L S O F Q UA N T I T IE S
D E TA I L E D P RO P O S A L S
S CH E M E P RO P O S A L S
INI T I A L C O N TA C T
IN C E P T IO N O U T L IN E P RO P O S A L S
5%
F EES
PRELIMINARY SERVICES
A Inception covers the clients
requirements such as use, timescale and
nance are established, and a costed
consultancy commission is developed:
this is always conrmed in writing at the
time. During this period the landscape
architect will typically visit the site,
obtain from the client information about
ownership and any legal restrictions
about access and development. Advice
regarding other necessary consultants
will be given and advice given on any
specialist contractors or suppliers
advisable (which may require long lead
times to organize).
B Feasibility involves the testing of the
clients requirements, an investigation of
alternative solutions to the design, advice
on planning applications, and what
these may involve. At this stage it will be
determined exactly how the standard
services are delivered.
STANDARD SERVICES
C Outline proposals include development
of outline design proposals and meeting
with other design consultants to develop
the design. Initial meetings with the
planning authorities are held to determine
their detailed requirements and those
of the Construction, Design and
Management (CDM) Planning Supervisor.
D Scheme proposals involve
development of the designs prepared
at the outline stage in sketch form
135
136
137
138
P ROJ EC T MANAG E R
STA K E H O L D E R S
EX TERNAL
STA K E H O L D E R S
CLIEN T
TEAM
GOVERNMEN T
P ROJ EC T
S P E C I A L I ST S
CDM ADVISOR
M U LT I-D I S C I P L I N A R Y
P ROJ EC T TEAM
ENGINEE R
ARCHITEC T
P L ANNING ADVIS OR
LANDSCAPE
ARCHITEC T
QUAN TIT Y
S U R V E YO R
CLIEN T
P ROJ EC T MANAG E R
P L ANNING ADVIS OR
M E C H A N I C A L A N D E L E C T R I C A L (M + E) E N G I N E E R
ST R U C T U R A L E N G I N E E R
A R B O R I C U LT U R I ST
S OILS
S P E C I A L I ST S
DEVELOPER
P ROJ EC T
ECOLOGY
CDM ADVISOR
Q UAN T IT Y S U R VE YOR
L AND SCAP E ARCHITEC T
ARCHITEC T
CLIEN T
L AND SCAP E ARCHITEC T
A R B O R I C U LT U R I ST
E C O L O G I ST
LANDSCAPE MANAG ER
S OILS
P R I VAT E
P ROJ EC T
S P E C I A L I ST S
I R R I G AT I O N
ENGINEE R
P L ANNING ADVIS OR
Q UAN T IT Y S U R VE YOR
ARCHITEC T
139
TASK
1) CONSULTANTS APPOINTMENT
2) WORK STAGE A- INCEPTION
3) WORK STAGE B- FEASIBILITY
4) STAGE B CLIENT PRESENTATION
5) WORK STAGE C- CONCEPT DESIGN
Effort
Year 1
Year 2
CONSULTANTS APPOINTMENT
2w
3w
STAGE B CLIENT PRESENTATION
6w
STAGE C CLIENT PRESENTATION
7w
STAGE D CLIENT PRESENTATION AND APPROVAL
PLANNING APPLICATION SUBMITTAL
12w
STAGE E CLIENT APPROVAL
6w
dependency lines
connect follow-on
and related tasks
milestones are individual
completion dates
4w
2w
START ON SITE
24w
PRACTICAL COMPLETION
4w
HANDOVER
52w
Costing a project
Adequate cost planning is critical to any
project and should be discussed from
the outset. This is especially so in the
case of landscape architecture, where
costing by cost planners or quantity
surveyors is often not comprehensive
and may prove inadequate. There are
two aspects of costing: capital costs and
ongoing maintenance and management.
Many landscape architects tend to avoid
thinking about maintenance costs but
its an essential consideration to ensure
that proposals prove t for purpose in
the long run. The reason why so many
public fountains are dry is that the cost of
maintaining them was not considered in
the initial planning stage and the nancial
arrangements to support those costs
were not set up.
Transport + parks
+ sound, long-term
investment
= Successful long-term
real-estate investment
= Good community
development
141
PROJECT COSTS
Project costs diagram for a typical park development, including design time
and fees can equate to up to 10 per cent of the development programme.
The ongoing annual maintenance and management costs should be
identied at the project inception.
10%
90%
C O N ST R U C T I O N P H A S E
P R O J E C T C A P I TA L
C O ST S (I N C L U D E S
F E E S) 1 0 0 %
PA R K
2 . 0 M I L L I O N /
U S $3 . 0 M I L L I O N /H A
D ESIG N F EES
U P TO 1 0 % O F
C A P I TA L C O ST
1%
CONTRACT DOCUMENTS
WHERE
DRAWING S
-ELEMEN TS
-O B J E C T S
- L O C AT I O N S
*P L ANS
*SE C TIONS
* D E TA I L S
CON T RAC T
(F O R M O F A G R E E M E N T)
BE TWEEN CLIEN T &
C O N T R A C TO R
BIL L S O F
QUAN TIT Y
(B O F Q S)
HOW
MANY
W H AT
142
S P E C I F I C AT I O N
- M AT E R I A L S
-M E TH OD O L O G Y
-WO RK M AN S HIP
AMENIT Y
GRASS
> 5/
U S$8/M2
GROUND
COVER
N AT U R A L
STO N E
PAV I N G
> 1 2 0/
U S $1 8 0/M 2
> 2 5/
U S $3 8 /M 2
SH RUB
P L AN TING
> 4 5/
U S $ 6 8/M 2
PA R K
G R AV E L
S U R FA C I N G
L AWN
> 1 5/
U S $2 3/M 2
> 1 0/
U S $1 5/M 2
P R E- C A ST
CONCRE TE
PAV I N G
> 3 0/
U S $ 4 5/M 2
BR ICK
PAV I N G
> 6 0/
U S $ 9 1/M 2
20 0/
U S $3 0 2 /M 2
143
145
Landscape management
All landscape architects should have
an understanding of landscape
management, which relates to what
happens to a site after the initial
development work has been completed.
Much more so than, say, in architecture,
where the architect hands over work
that is essentially nished. In landscape
architecture handover (technically
practical completion) is a crucial and
open-ended stage of any landscape
architecture project and should be
planned and costed accordingly. For
instance, it does not make sense to
spend, say, 2,000 on a large street tree
and then not put in place an arrangement
whereby the stakes are checked regularly
to ensure that they are not rubbing
against the side of the tree so that the
bark is wounded and fungal rot sets in.
Too often the result is a dead tree within
a few years.
LANDSCAPE MANAGEMENT
GARD ENS
PA R K S
R E STO R AT I O N
BIODIVE R SIT Y
AMENIT Y L ANDSCAPE
MANAG EMEN T
C O N S E R VAT I O N / H A B I TAT
MANAG EMEN T
P L ANNING CARE
P U BLIC OP EN
S PA C E
S P E C I E S + H A B I TAT
P RO TE C TION
L A N D S PA C E
MANAG EMEN T
RESOU RCES
W I L D L I F E I N I T I AT I V E S
I M P L E M E N TAT I O N
A G R I C U LT U R E
D I V E R S I F I C AT I O N
S U STA I N A B I L I T Y
E N V I R O N M E N TA L
MANAG EMEN T
R E C L A M AT I O N
W A ST E
147
148
1. Excellence
We demonstrate a commitment
to high standards in all that we
do, provide leadership in our eld
and strive for success by being
professional, innovative and creative.
2. Integrity
We believe in being open, forthright
and honest in our dealings with
people and organizations and in
adopting behaviour consistent with
our values.
3. Collaboration
We work with others for the greater
good of the community, cultivate
long-term relationships and
partnerships, and respond to the
needs of local people
and organisations.
4. Valuing people
We aim to treat everyone with
respect. We are committed to the
development of all our people,
paid and volunteers, including
the fullment of potential and the
recognition and celebration
of achievement.
5. Responsibility
Our stewardship involves:
safeguarding the environment for
future generations; being accountable
for all that we do, including the
consequences of any decisions we
take; and making the best use of all
our resources.
149
A. Canary Wharf,
B. High-pressure hose treatment using drinking
water is wasteful of a scarce resource,
example at Canary Wharf, London.
C. Wageningen, the Netherlands: meadow grass
on roadside verges, managed without pesticides.
150
P R O B L E M A N D/O R
O P P OR TU NIT Y ID EN T IF IE D
E STA B L I S H M E N T O F
P L AN NING G OALS
RE GIONAL L AND S CAP E
A N A LY S I S
LOCAL LANDSCAPE
A N A LY S I S
D E TA I L E D P L A N N I N G
ST U D I E S
P L AN NIN G C O N CEP T S,
O P T IONS & CHOICES
LANDSCAPE PLAN
E D U C AT I O N A N D C O M M U N I T Y
PA R T I C I PAT I O N
D E S I G N E X P L O R AT I O N S
P L AN + D ESIG N
I M P L E M E N TAT I O N
P L A N A D M I N I ST R AT I O N
AND MANAG EMEN T
151
152
153
6
Education and Employment
Applying for a university course
Internships and jobs
Setting up your own business
Marketing
Case study: Thames Landscape Strategy
A note on professional status: the way the
profession is seen worldwide
Case study: Druk White Lotus School, Ladakh, India
156
163
164
165
166
168
170
EXAMPLES OF
OR THOGR AP HIC DR AWING S,
H A N D - D R A W N A N D D I G I TA L
EXAMPLES OF
D I G I TA L W O R K
EXAMPLES OF
C R E AT I V E W O R K
M O U N T E D P H O TO S O F
3D MOD ELS +
I N STA L L AT I O N P I E C E S
C R E AT I N G A
POR TFOLIO
U N D E R STA N D W H Y Y O U N E E D
A POR TFOLIO
W O R K S H O U L D B E S I M P LY
MOUN TED AND TITLED
O N LY I N C L U D E W O R K T H AT
YO U ARE P RO U D OF
ORGANIZE YO U R WORK IN
A S E Q U EN CE YO U C AN
TA L K T H R O U G H
AV O I D P U T T I N G Y O U R W O R K
I N P L A ST I C S L E E V E S
S O M E I N ST I T U T I O N S H AV E
TE CH NIC AL
TEACHING
D ESIG N
TEACHING
THEORY
TEACHING
157
I N S P I R AT I O N A L STA F F &
M E N TO R S
A R T ST U D I O S & M O D E L
WORKSHOP S
P R E S E N TAT I O N
G A L L E R Y S PA C E S
ST U D E N T V O I C E
LEC TURE
T H E AT R E S &
E- C O N F E R E N C I N G
RESEARCH LIBRARY
TE CH NIC AL &
M AT E R I A L S
LIBRARY
COMP U TE R L ABS
H O R T I C U LT U R A L
COL L E C TION
D E S I G N ST U D I O S
D E M O N ST R AT I O N A N D
E X P E R I M E N TAT I O N A R E A S
SEE
REF LEC T
READ
BEING
A B L E TO. . .
CAP TURE
DEVELOP
C O M M U N I C AT E
159
AFRICA:
Landscape architecture education in
Africa is relatively undeveloped outside
South Africa. Indeed, there are no
landscape architecture schools in the
whole of North Africa, including Egypt,
that we know of (there are schools
elsewhere in the Middle East such as
in Lebanon, Israel, Palestine and Saudi
Arabia). In South Africa there are currently
three universities accredited by the state
registration body, the South African
Council for the Landscape Architectural
Profession (SACLAP), and a further
two awaiting accreditation. That at the
University of Cape Town is a two-year
conversion MLA. North of the Zambezi
there appears to be the two established
courses at Jomo Kenyatta University of
Agriculture and Technology in Nairobi
and a Master of Landscape Architecture
(M.Land.Arch.) at Uganda Martyrs
University in Kampala which follows a
Bachelor of Environmental Design. There
are national associations in Kenya (a
chapter of the Association of Architects),
Morocco, Malawi and Nigeria as well as
in South Africa.
ASIA:
In Asia many of the national associations
list schools. The biggest increase in the
past two decades has been in China,
where there are now large numbers of
landscape architecture schools: contact
the Chinese Society of Landscape
Architects for further details (www.chsla.
org.cn/english.htm). There are separate
associations in Taiwan (www.clasit.org.
tw/) and Hong Kong (http://www.hkila.
com/v2/) where there is a conversion
MLA at the University of Hong Kong.
In the Peoples Republic, the Englishlanguage site to start searching for
landscape architecture schools is the
website of the Chinese College and
Admissions System (CUCAS), www.cucas.
edu.cn/, which is aimed at international
students, as well as approaching the
Chinese Society of Landscape Architects
for further details. CUCAS lists about 70
landscape architecture programmes,
but this is only selective. By contrast, the
Indian Society of Landscape Architects
(established in 2003) lists only four
schools (www.isola.org.in/site/about).
In South-East Asia there is landscape
architecture education in Thailand, Korea,
Malaysia, Indonesia and the Philippines.
Further west, in Iran and in the Middle
160
AUSTRALASIA:
There are comprehensive listings of
schools in Australia and New Zealand,
where the profession has been well
established since at least the 1970s.
The Australian Institute of Landscape
Architects (www.aila.org.au/) has
accredited eight university programmes;
the New Zealand Institute of Landscape
Architects equivalent has accredited three
(www.nzila.co.nz/become-a-landscapearchitect/how-can-i-become-a-la.aspx).
EUROPE:
IFLA Europe operates a school
recognition system in conjunction with
the national associations and has a
country-by-country listing including a
total of 50 schools for instance, seven
of the nineteen German schools and
four of the fteen Landscape Instituteaccredited schools in the UK. The IFLA
Europe recognition is not comprehensive
because applications are on a voluntary
basis. There is as yet no totally
comprehensive pan-European listing,
so students are advised to approach
NORTH AMERICA:
The American Society of Landscape
Architects (ASLA) websites education
area (http://www.asla.org/schools.aspx)
lists landscape architecture schools
in the US. Most states have at least
one. Schools are accredited by the
professional association, ASLA, via the
Landscape Architectural Accreditation
Board (LAAB), a body run by the US
professional association which also vets
the ve schools accredited in Canada
by the Canadian Society of Landscape
Architects, including that at the Universit
de Montral which is, of course, Frenchspeaking. Note licensure (registration)
is a separate state-based system. The
Council of Educators in Landscape
Architecture (CELA) also publishes a
list of schools which covers the North
American schools as well as a few in
other continents http://www.thecela.
org/school-list.php?alpha=u.
161
JOBS
Potential employers prefer to receive
a postal application. Whether youre
applying for a job or an unpaid, shortterm internship, send a covering letter,
a short, two-page curriculum vitae and
some drawing work (say, six or seven
examples) on A4 paper. Send CDs only
as back-up. Note: do not email material
in the rst place: landscape architects
are busy people and it takes time to
download attachments. Indeed, many
email hosts block large attachments
from unknown senders. Address letters
personally to a named individual in
a practice, preferably a principal; if
going for an interview, research the
practice beforehand. Do not expect an
acknowledgement for applications
though it is always nice to receive one.
D I R E C TO R S
A S S O C I AT E D I R E C TO R S
P ROJ E C T OR SENIOR
L AND S CAP E ARCHITEC T S
TE CH NIC AL
S P E C I A L I ST S
LANDSCAPE
ARCHITEC T S &
D ESIG N E R S
G R A D U AT E
LANDSCAPE
ARCHITEC T S
IN TE RNS
163
is planned for the future include highspeed railways and, in Scotland and
Wales, the reopening of closed railways
environmental impact assessment is
critical in such projects. It might therefore
make sense to establish a market niche in
visual assessment or noise limitation so
that you can nd work as a subconsultant
to bigger rms.
The economies of China, India and
Brazil are still growing. Part of the
challenge in these economies is to
convince the market that landscape
architecture and the related advice the
profession can offer on sustainability
issues and the like are important for
developers, whether in the private or
state sector. In China the other challenge
is to ensure consultancy services are
valued for themselves.
S K E TC H B O O K A N D A 3
DRAWING MEDIA
D I G I TA L C A M E R A
H I G H -S P E C L A P TO P
WITH IN TE RNE T
CONNE C TION CABL ES
& CHARG E R
SMAR T PHONE
PENCIL CASE &
COL OU RING P ENS
C O M PA S S
U S B B A C K- U P D R I V E
U LT R A L I G H T W E I G H T,
A 3-S I Z E, H A R D WEARING HAND
LUGGAG E CASE
164
A4 USB COLOUR
SCANNER
B O TA N I C A L F I E L D
I D E N T I F I C AT I O N
G UID ES
Marketing
Until the late twentieth century,
active marketing was not considered
appropriate for any profession in most
countries. Commissions were obtained
by making submissions in competitions,
being listed on professional registers,
networking, such as joining local business
organizations, chambers of commerce
and charities, and via the telephone
directory. This situation changed in the
1980s in response to fresh free-market
thinking and a general wish to promote
competition. Now all professions
can advertise in many countries, and
competitive consultancy fee tendering
is the rule though the downside of
this is that often the cheapest wins.
Cheapest is not necessarily best or most
appropriate. Marketing accounts for
a signicant proportion of landscape
architects annual expenditure. Such
165
166
167
168
169
170
171
7
The Future
A changing environment
Some challenges
Case study: The Dutch National Water Plan
Case study: Floating Gardens, Shad Thames, London
Case study: Korail, Dhaka, Bangladesh
Case study: North Holland coastline, the Netherlands
Recycling and everyday practice
Final thoughts
174
177
178
182
186
190
192
194
A changing environment
As this book is being written, nearly 50
years after the Philadelphia Declaration
above, the world economy is passing
through what might euphemistically
be called interesting times. There is
expansion in Asia and South America
and growth in China, India, Indonesia,
Brazil and Australasia. With demand for
raw resources fed by growth rates of
up to 10 per cent, there is a worldwide
rise in commodity prices and Africa is
increasingly seen not only as a source
of such materials but also as providing
fresh land for agricultural production.
Meanwhile much of the Western world
Europe and North America, but also
Japan is experiencing little or no
economic growth, and the future of
the Eurozone is being questioned.
In the greater scheme of history, the
Western worlds relative economic
downturn can be viewed as a passing
phase in the mid term (though hopefully
one that will lead to more effective
regulation of the banking industry) and
clearly there is a rebalancing of the
economies between East and West and
North and South. Western economic
dominance is recent only 300400
years at most for most of the past 2,000
years the leading centres of sophisticated
technology and cultural development
were centred on China and India.
174
loss of biodiversity;
net increase in the human
ecological footprint;
climate change and in consequence
uctuations in extreme weather
conditions as well as sea level rise
and ooding, and a threat to the
water supply;
shortage of raw materials.
LANDSCAPE MISSION
The focus of landscape architecture has evolved over the last two
centuries, gradually widening its inuence over the design process.
S U S TA I
VIS
UA
NABLE
L
CO
OG
ICA
1 9 TH C E N T U R Y
20
TH
CEN
TUR
2 1 ST C E N T U R Y
175
Some challenges
WATER
Water is a key resource. Already
desalination plants dot the Mediterranean
littoral, while in London, Thames Water
opened the 250 million Beckton
desalination plant in 2010: south-east
England is a water decit area in most
summers. A restructuring of infrastructure
is following: national trunk water
networks, solar power farms, wind farms,
retro-tting of existing buildings with
insulation and solar power, wind farms,
and nuclear ssion (or maybe nuclear
fusion in the light of the Three Mile Island,
Chernobyl and Fukishima disasters),
biomass as a fuel for power stations
(and development of ethanol fuels) and
densication of development to minimize
energy use. Denmark has achieved
gures of 25 per cent of energy from
sustainable sources.
Urbanization increases river ow and
storms overwhelm a river basin, hence
the Rhine oods of 1995 and 2007. For
example, the watershed of the Rhine has
lost 80 per cent of its ood plains and
the Elbe 85 per cent in the past century:
177
26
178
164
30
179
LOSS OF FORESTS
The UN Food and Agricultural
Organization (FAO) reports that primary
forests are being lost or modied at the
rate of 6 million ha per annum. There has
been widespread loss of forest cover in
Indonesia, Africa and South America. This
process contributes to global warming,
sometimes dramatically, for example, in
the forest res of recent years in SouthEast Asia such as in Indonesia in 199798
or the 2005 Malaysian Haze. Such
forest res caused by slash-and-burn
forest-clearance techniques also affect
air quality and health, not to mention
causing a major loss of natural habitat
and, in consequence, of biodiversity.
Vegetation is necessary for the
production of oxygen. Homo sapiens
is dependent on oxygen, an element
that reacts very readily, combining with
other elements to form compounds:
for instance, with iron to make rust
(ferrous oxide). It is therefore a fugitive
gas and easily disappears. Some 2.8
billion years ago, in what is known as
the Great Oxidation Event, the levels of
oxygen in the earths atmosphere rose
sufficiently to be able to support life as
we know it. Oxygen was and is produced
by cyanobacteria, or blue-green algae.
These microbes perform photosynthesis
using energy from sunshine, water and
carbon dioxide to produce carbohydrates
P R O D U C E >1 2, 0 0 0 K G
OX YG EN
R E M O V E 5 0 0 K G O F C O 2 + 5 0 0 K G TO X I C
P O L L U TA N T S
1 0 0 M AT U R E B R O A D L E A F
T REES IN A YEAR
A B S O R B 9 5 0, 0 0 0 L I T R E S O F
STO R M W AT E R R U N - O F F
A L S O P R O V I D E P H Y TO R E M E D I AT I O N
NEEDS 300KG
OX YG EN A Y EAR
181
182
183
BIODIVERSITY LOSS
The growth of urban areas, the increasing
rate of consumption of resources and
anthropogenic (human-made) climate
change are combining to threaten
biodiversity. There is concern about
major extinction of life forms. The
IUCN (the Internation Union for the
Conservation of Nature) reports 1 in
8 birds, 1 in 4 mammals and 1 in 3 of
amphibian species are under threat.
This threat can be addressed in cities
by fostering vegetation, including roof
gardens (German and Swiss legislation
has required all buildings with at roofs
to be greened (i.e. vegetated) since the
1980s for new-build and renovation).
And also by the development of public
gardens and open space. Other simple
measures include preventing the paving
over of front gardens to create carparking areas, or if this is to be permitted
then prescribing (as in Denmark)
the laying of two-track paving to
accommodate car wheels with
planting between.
Maintenance techniques in public areas
can avoid the use of both insecticides
and herbicides; a policy switch from
cutting grass short to the cultivation
of long meadow grass soon leads to
benets in terms of burgeoning insect
populations. Woodland development,
changes in agricultural practice and
the re-creation of wetland areas can
also promote biodiversity. Planning for
ecological corridors can permit the
movement of ora and fauna across
the landscape as they respond to
climate change.
Biodiversity Action Plans (BAPs) are
a formal way of representing such
action. BAPs are a response to the UN
Convention on Biological Diversity of
1992. They involve a survey of the existing
biological diversity, assessment of the
conservation status of species and setting
targets for conservation and nally setting
in place the budgets and management
which will achieve them.
The fostering of habitat is key to the
survival of many species. The area of
wildower meadow and unimproved
grassland in the United Kingdom
has fallen to 2 per cent of its level
in the 1930s, with a consequent
loss of buttery-rich habitats. There
have been collapses in bird species
populations, such as the house sparrow
184
ECOLOGICAL FOOTPRINT
One consequence of the growth of the
human population is an increase in net
ecological footprint. The latter term is the
measure of demand for natural capital
expressed as global hectares per person.
(gha). Natural capital is the stock of
natural ecosystems yielding a continuing
ow of valuable ecosystem goods or
services. For example, a population of
trees yields a ow of new trees, a ow
that is indenitely sustainable. Since the
ow of services from ecosystems requires
that they function as whole systems, the
resilience and diversity of the system
are important components of natural
capital. One obvious example of loss
of natural capital was the failure of the
Newfoundland cod shing grounds in
the early 1990s due to overshing and
the ending of what had been the richest,
most productive cod shery in the world.
It has still not recovered.
The global average productive area per
person was 1.8gha. In 2007, according
to the Global Footprint Networks Living
Planet Report (2010), the US footprint
was 8.0gha/person, Switzerland was 7.51
gha/person, and the Chinese footprint
was 2.12 gha/person. China was just
then moving into decit. Overall human
population with its current demands
is exceeding the carrying capacity of
the planet.
One challenge is that of reorganising the
way developed countries consume the
Earths resources. The other is to nd
ways in which the growing populations
of the worlds megacities can be housed
sustainably. But what has all of this got to
do with landscape architecture? After all,
it is only a small profession and can hardly
determine population growth or seriously
reduce our economic dependence on
hydrocarbons on its own. Nonetheless,
it can play its part in helping societies
adjust to a low-carbon economy.
New models for sustainable urban
development need to be explored
for growing Asian, African and South
American megacities; one answer might
lie in the barridas, bidonvilles or slums
that most planners and city authorities
CLIMATE CHANGE
Climate change is a trigger for all sorts of
stresses we place on the Earths resources
and ecosystems. Growth of population,
urbanization and humans overall effect on
the land are unbalancing. Global warming
fundamentally impacts on our landscape
and its ecosystems in ways we may judge
as benign or adverse. For instance, northern
Europe will see increased crop production
due to the increase in temperatures,
but there will be increased storms with
consequent ash ooding. On current
Intergovernmental Panel of Climate Change
(IPCC) estimates, if there is a more than
2C rise in average temperatures, southern
Europe will experience lower rainfall and
suffer desertication (two-thirds of Spain
would become desert) and generally there
are increasing sea level rises. There are
vegetation changes and increased human
death rates due to high temperature stress
for the old, the ill and the young and the
malaria-carrying Aedes mosquito will
spread across Europe.
Economic losses
due to natural
catastrophes rose
faster than economic
activity (e.g. due to
population growth,
globalization)
human-made
climatic changes
and development
of new risk
Increased
globalization and
interdependency
of risk
ECOLOGICAL FOOTPRINT
Ecological footprint, global hectares (gha) per person
is a measure of demand for natural capital. The Earths
biocapacity is 2.1 gha/ person.
U A E=1 0. 6 8 G H A / P E R S
U S A =8 . 0 0 G H A / P E R S
C H I N A =2 . 2 1 G H A / P E R S
I N D I A = 0.9 G H A / P E R S
185
186
187
188
189
190
191
REUSE
RE C YC L E
192
RECLAIM
R E M A N U FA C T U R E
A. Granite 75mm thick being laid on a deep concrete base, London. Rigid, and expensive
in embodied carbon and embodied energy, and, economically, it costs more.
B. Often when poorly detailed the concrete base will lead to cracking in the decorative
surface, Paris.
C. Reclaimed concrete foundations broken up and reused as stepping stones, Venlo Floriade
2012, the Netherlands.
D. Pre-cast concrete paving prior to laying, Paris.
E. In situ concrete is prone to cracking even on high prole projects, UNESCO Noguchi
Garden, Paris.
F. Large-scale pre-cast concrete paving units laid in a simple grid form, Venlo Floriade
2012, the Netherlands.
G. Bridge of recycled scaffolding planks, Wilde Weelde (Wild World) garden designed
by Jasper Helmantel, Venlo Floriade 2012, the Netherlands.
H. In the urban public realm coordination of below-ground services is crucial to avoid
this situation in Belfast.
I. Simple, coordinated detailing using pre-cast concrete walls and paving units all loose
laid on a compacted sub-base.
7 The Future Recycling and everyday practice
193
Final thoughts
These challenges are all opportunities for
the future of landscape architecture. We
need to change the way we live, to realize
that the free market has its limits, that
commons in its economic sense should
be valued. We need to act as stewards for
our world which increasingly is formed and
dominated by human activity: we need
to treat our planet with care. It is for the
landscape architects of the next 50 years,
for whom this book was written, to seize
them. Let us end with a further quotation
from the Philadelphia Declaration of 1966
with which we began this chapter:
194
195
Glossary
196
Green belt The designation of land around certain cities and large builtup areas, which aims to keep it permanently open or largely undeveloped.
197
Private sector The part of the economy that is not state-owned, and
is operated by companies for prot.
Production information Documentation in the form of drawings,
specications, schedules and quantities that describes a proposed
construction project. Increasingly it is communicated and coordinated
using Building Information Modelling (BIM).
Professional fees Payment for consultancy work done by a professional;
they do not include expenses.
Propagation Reproduction of plants by seeds, cuttings, grafting, layering,
micropropagation, etc. Seed propagation involves sexual reproduction
with consequent genetic variation, while vegetative reproduction such
as cuttings and grafting, produces a genetically identical clone of the
parent plant.
Public open space (POS) Open space accessible to the public, both
land and water areas providing for sport and outdoor recreation including
public parks and gardens, squares and civic spaces, nature reserves
and green corridors, sports elds, playgrounds, allotments,
cemeteries and churchyards.
198
Bibliography
Introduction
General guides and introductions.
Topos (http://www.toposmagazine.com/)
Scape http://www.scapemagazine.com/about.html
Greenplaces http://www.green-places.co.uk/
AECOM: http://www.aecom.com/What+We+Do/
Design+and+Planning/Practice+Areas/Landscape+Architecture+an
d+Urban+Design
SWA: http://www.swagroup.com/
Turenscape: http://www.turenscape.com/english/
West 8: http://www.west8.nl/
www.gardenvisit.com/
http://www.land8lounge.com/
http://www.bls.gov/ooh/Architecture-and-Engineering/Landscapearchitects.htm
http://www.bls.gov/oes/current/oes171012.htm#nat
http://asla.org/ContentDetail.aspx?id=11346
Bibliography
http://www.aila.org.au/surveys/salary.htm
http://www.landscapeinstitute.org/news/index.php/news_articles/
view/how_much_do_landscape_architects_earn/
Definitions of landscape architecture
http://www.iaonline.org/index.php?Itemid=42&view=article&optio
n=com_content&id=37
http://www.asla.org/ContentDetail.aspx?id=12200&PageTitle=Educ
ation&RMenuId=54
http://www.asla.org/uploadedFiles/CMS/Government_Affairs/
Public_Policies/Licensure_Denition_of_Practice.pdf
http://www.bdla.de/seite102.htm
http://www.landscapeinstitute.org.uk/PDF/Contribute/Landscape_
Institute_Royal_Charter_Revised_Version_July_2008.pdf
Lund, Annemarie, Guide to Danish Landscape Architecture 10002003, Arkitektens Forlag, 1997
http://www.FrederickLawOlmsted.com/
http://www.olmsted.org/home
Changing priorities: ecology, biodiversity and sustainability
Turner, Monica G., Gardner, Robert H. & ONeil, Robert V., Landscape
Ecology in Theory and Practice: Pattern and Process, Springer, 2001
199
Knox, Paul and Ozolins, Peter (ed.) The Design Professionals and the
Built Environment, an Introduction, John Wiley & Sons, 2000
Itten, Johannes, The Elements of Color, John Wiley & Sons, 1970
Porter, Tom, & Goodman, Sue, Design Primer for Architects, Graphic
Designers and Artists, Butterworth-Heinemann, 1989
Pye, David, The Nature & Aesthetics of Design, A & C Black Ltd,
2000
Ryan, Mark, Geometry for Dummies, John Wiley & Sons, 2008
Ching, Francis, Architecture, Form, Space and Order, John Wiley &
Sons, 2007
McHarg, Ian L., Design with Nature, John Wiley & Sons, 1995
Spirn, Anne W., The Granite Garden: Urban Nature and Human
Design, Basic Books, 1985
http://gonzogardens.com/
http://www.urbansketchers.org
3-D modelling and video
http://www.buildingsmart.org/
Mapping, air photography, satellite imagery, GIS
Corner, James & MacLean, Alex S., Taking Measures Across the
American Landscape, Yale University Press, 2000
http://www.esa.int/Our_Activities/Observing_the_Earth
Report writing
http://www.ribabookshops.com/item/riba-outline-plan-of-work2007-including-corrigenda-issued-january-2009/100004/
Multi-disciplinary design teams, contracts
and_paralympic_games/6467.aspx
The Parks Trust, Milton Keynes, UK
www.theparkstrust.com/
Dr Jac. P. Thijssepark, Amstelveen, the Netherlands
www.thijssepark.nl/
Some challenges
Education websites
http://www.iwanttobealandscapearchitect.com/
http://europe.iaonline.org/images/PDF/120715_landscape_
internshipguide_rh.pdf
Setting up your own business
City think tank with an insight into world-wide ideas about large city
management world-wide: http://www.citymayors.com
Climate change
Kemp, Martin (ed.), Zero Carbon Britain 2030, Centre for Alternative
Technology, 2010 supplemented by their website http://www.
zerocarbonbritain.com/
http://www.architecture-student.com/professional-practice/thingsto-do-before-setting-up-practice-in-architecture/
Chapter 6 case studies
202
The ASLA web page on climate change has links to many other
websites and resources:
http://www.asla.org/climatechange.aspx
Resources and raw materials, sustainability, recycling and
everyday practice
Air:
Water
http://www.wwf.org/
http://wwf.panda.org/about_our_earth/all_publications/living_
planet_report/
http://www.oneplanetliving.org/index.html
The World Wide Web changes and websites go out of use. You may
nd some websites that are no longer directly accessible by looking
on the Wayback Archive http://web.archive.org/
A longer version of this bibliography appears online.
Bibliography
203
Index
Page references in italics refer to captions
Acropolis, Athens, Greece 20
AECOM 27, 136
Africa 29, 160, 168, 173, 174, 180, 184
air photography 122, 123, 125
Alhambra Palace, Granada, Spain 20, 81
Alma Grove, London 181
Almas Tower, Dubai 10
Alphand, Jean-Charles-Adolphe 24, 25
American Society of Landscape Architects (ASLA) 15, 26, 158, 160
Aphrodite Hills Resort, Cyprus 9, 14, 867, 1301
Arad, Michael 17
Arcadis 190
Arlington Business Park, Theale, UK 93
Asia 20, 52, 160, 174, 180, 184
Asplund, Erik Gunnar 38
Australasia 29, 160, 168, 174
Avery Hill Park, London 126
Aztec West business park, Bristol 92, 93
Bank of China, Hong Kong 57, 60
Barcelona Botanic Gardens, Spain (Figueras) 14, 38
Barth, Edwin 28
Bijhouwer, Professor Jan T.P. 28
biodiversity conservation 503, 83, 128, 147, 174, 180, 184, 188
biomorphism 27, 96, 101
Birkenhead Park, Liverpool, UK (Paxton) 24, 25
Bjrbekk & Lindheim 1089
Boulevard Henri IV, Paris 195
Bridgeman, Charles 19
bridges 30, 31, 43, 66, 86, 88, 136, 152, 153, 193
the brief 17, 58, 60, 66, 69, 78, 134, 140
Broerse, C.P. 152
Brown, Simon 170
Building Information Modelling (BIM) 124, 165
Bund Deutscher Landschaftsarchitekten (BDLA) 16, 28
The Bur Juman Centre, Dubai 12
Burford, Janie 30
Burj Khalifa, Dubai 94
Burnham, Daniel Hudson 26
business parks 44, 45, 68, 77, 78, 92, 93, 141, 150
Cadair Idris, Snowdonia National Park, Wales 33
Calouste Gulbenkian Trust park, Lisbon
(Ribeiro Telles and Viana Barreiro) 65
Canada 158, 160, 168
Canary Wharf, Docklands, London 65, 150
Canberra masterplan, Australia (Griffin) 99
cars and car use 78, 86, 92, 94, 188
Central Park, New York (Olmsted and Vaux) 24, 25, 65, 701
Centre for Alternative Technology (CAT), Machynlleth, Wales 144, 146, 189
The Centurion golf course, St. Albans, UK 90
change orders 69, 140
charities as clients 10, 30, 65, 70, 144, 148, 170
Chteau de Villandry, Loire, France 22
China
environmental issues 52, 174, 177, 180, 184, 185, 188
landscape architecture 20, 29, 52, 96
training in landscape architecture 160, 164, 180
Church, Thomas 96, 99
city planning 10, 16, 36, 40, 92, 94, 96 see also New Towns
Clark, Galen 32
Clarke, Gilmore D. 27
climate change 51, 65, 174, 177, 184, 185, 188, 190, 195
coastal areas and landscapes 47, 178, 184, 185, 188, 1901
204
styles 3843
university courses 26, 28, 65, 156, 158, 161, 163
see also landscape planning
landscape gardens and gardening 19, 23, 24, 30, 65, 85, 96, 101, 174
Landscape Institute 10, 16, 28, 69, 134, 168
landscape management 8, 15, 16, 126, 14752, 153
landscape planning 8, 15, 32, 34, 52
Latz + Partner 40, 43, 44
LDA Design 136
Le Ntre, Andr 96, 97
legislation 9, 267, 28, 29, 34, 36, 52, 168, 184
Lely, Cornelis 34
Lenn, Peter Josef 24
Lewerentz, Sigurd 38
lighting 58, 59, 60, 64, 68, 86
Lille School of Architecture and Landscape 161
Linear experiences wire model 111
Lipton, Stuart 68
Liverpool International Garden Festival (1984) 52
Liverpool One Development, Liverpool, UK 12, 14, 62, 78, 81
London Docklands Development Corporation (LDDC) 68, 74, 147
London Green Belt 36, 37
London 2012 Olympic Park 10, 133, 1367, 147
Lutyens, Edwin 96
maps and mapping techniques 35, 52, 53, 83, 123, 1256, 127, 179
marketplace and waterfront, Odda, Norway (Bjrbekk & Lindheim) 1089
Mawson, Thomas 28, 92
McHarg, Ian 83, 126
Mehdi Garden, Hadlow College, Kent, UK 14, 101
Mmorial des Martyrs et de la Dportation, Notre Dame, Paris 81, 94
Mezquita, Crdoba, Spain 78, 99
Middle East 10, 29, 160, 164
Mies van der Rohe pavilion, Barcelona, Spain 89
Millennium Park, Chicago, US 144
Milton Keynes, UK 92, 93, 1489
Modernism 27, 28, 38, 74, 91, 94, 99
More London office development, London (Townshend) 12, 14, 40, 41
motorways see roads
multi-disciplinary design teams 10, 27, 1367, 138, 139, 140, 1901
Muse du Quai Branly, Paris (Kersal) 60
Nant Cymdu, Aberdraw, Wales 82
Nash, John 96, 141
Nasrid Palaces, Alhambra Palace, Granada, Spain 20
National Gallery, London 106
National Trust 10, 30, 32, 150
natural catastrophes 1845, 188
the Netherlands
city planning 180
land reclamation 34, 545
landscape architecture 34, 85, 92
national water policy 177, 178, 179
parks 14, 16, 28, 150, 152
training in landscape architecture 158, 163
New Delhi, India (Lutyens) 96
New Towns 267, 38, 52, 65, 148, 158
NGOs (non government organizations) as clients 30, 64, 65 see also
charities
9/11 Plaza water feature, New York (Arad and Walker) 17
Noguchi, Isamu 119
North America 23, 24, 26, 29, 32, 158, 160, 163, 174, 180 see also Canada;
United States
North Holland coastline, the Netherlands 1901
Olin 165
Olmsted, Frederick Law 24, 26, 27, 52, 70
Olmsted, John Charles 24
OMA (Office of Metropolitan Architecture) 40
Oostelijk Flevoland, the Netherlands 96
open space development 8, 10, 12, 78, 92, 147, 148, 184
see also public spaces
Ordnance Survey mapping 53, 125, 126
206
Oudolf, Piet 90
Painshill Park, Chobham, Surrey, UK (Hamilton and Burford) 12, 301,
65, 78
Parc Andr Citron, Paris 103
Parc Citron-Cvennes, Paris (Provost) 6, 10, 74, 96, 97, 144, 156
Parc de Bercy, Paris 74, 144
Parc de Cergy-Pontoise, France 74
Parc de La Villette, Paris 40, 41, 59, 91, 144, 147
Parc des Buttes Chaumont, Paris (Alphand) 25
Parc des Cornailles, Paris 62
Parc Diagonal Mar, Barcelona, Spain 144
Parc Diderot, La Dfense, Paris (Provost) 10, 74, 101
Parc Gell, Barcelona 89
Park Klosterberg, Magdeburg, Germany (Lenn) 24
parks
facilities 66, 141, 144
as green space 36, 44, 91
in history 20, 24, 26, 28, 52, 96
management and maintenance 68, 74, 141, 144, 147, 148, 150, 152,
153, 184
national parks 26, 27, 32, 34, 52
project costs 1416, 147, 148
public (municipal) parks 10, 14, 20, 24, 26, 28, 52, 92, 1416
see also business parks; named parks
Patel Taylor 745
paths 38, 58, 60, 97, 99, 101, 108, 152
Patio de los Arrayanes, Alhambra Palace, Granada, Spain 81
paving and pavements 60, 89, 97, 101, 103, 108, 135, 192, 193, 195
Paxton, Joseph 24, 25
peat bogs and planting 14, 16, 152, 153
I.M. Pei & Partners 94
Philadelphia Declaration (1966) 174, 194
Pittencrieff Park, Dunfermline, Scotland 28
plants and planting
colour 14, 59, 62, 101, 102, 103
containers 182
meadows and prairies 62, 74
seasonal planting 59, 62, 101, 102, 116
texture 101, 102, 103
wetland planting 12, 14, 54
see also named types of plants
politics 9, 15, 267, 28, 50, 52, 66, 150
pools 66, 81, 99, 101, 152
reection pools 60, 89, 97, 99, 101
swimming pools 64, 86, 130, 131
population growth 29, 36, 51, 52, 164, 174, 177, 180, 184, 185
Port Sunlight, Merseyside, UK 36
post-industrial landscape development 40, 445, 47, 667, 745, 78,
1045, 144
Postmodernism 38, 423
Potters Fields, London 90
Price, Sarah 136
private clients 65
private-sector as clients 64, 65, 66, 150
projects
community relationships 10, 38, 65, 66, 70, 83, 85, 1089, 148
completion 135, 147
maintenance 60, 68, 70, 74, 141, 147, 148, 150, 184
ongoing management 68, 70, 88, 147
costing projects 68, 138, 1416
capital costs 60, 68, 135, 138, 141, 142
fees 13, 60, 689, 134, 138, 142
maintenance and management costs 68, 70, 141, 142, 144, 147,
148, 150
stage payments 69
monitoring 58, 60, 135
pre-design work
the brief 17, 58, 60, 66, 69, 78, 134, 140
responsibilities 60, 68
site planning 7883, 84, 86, 88
site surveys 17, 72, 73, 78, 81, 83
timetables 68, 141
207
Picture Credits
Apart from those images listed below, all photographs are by the authors;
all line drawings are by Jamie Liversedge.
8a Mary Hooper; 11d Crown Copyright http://goc2012.culture.gov.uk/
ickr/olympic-park-aerial-photo/ re-use of this information resource
should be sent to e-mail:psi@nationalarchives.gsi.gov.uk; 11e Aero Camera
Hofmeester; 13b D.Paysage; 17b Paddy Clarke; 22a British Library/Robana
via Getty Images; 25a Paddy Clarke; 26a Frances Benjamin Johnson
Collection, Library of Congress. source http://www.loc.gov/pictures/
item/92501035/; 27b Courtesy of the Westchester County Archives; 27c
Library of Congress, Prints & Photographs Division, FSA/OWI Collection,
reproduction no. LC-USF34-072401-D; 32b Thinkstock; 33b National
Park Service; 35b Rgion Ile-de-France; 35c Cornwall Council; 36a RIBA
Library Photographs Collection; 38a Getty Images; 39c Room 4.1.3; 40b
OMA/ Architecture dAujourhui; 41D Paddy Clarke; 41e Mary Hooper; 41f
Mary Hooper; 41g Paddy Clarke; 41h Mary Hooper; 42a West 8 Urban
Design & Landscape Architecture; 42b West 8 Urban Design & Landscape
Architecture; 42c Municipality of Madrid; 53a and b David Watson; 55a
NASA; 55b NASA; 55c NASA; 55d Istock/cgnznt144; 55e Ministerie van
Verkeer en Waterstaat, Rijksdienst voor de IJsselmeerpolders; 64a Mary
Hooper; 67b Gustafson Porter; 70a Paddy Clarke; 71b Mary Hooper;
71ce Paddy Clarke; 87f Lanitis Development Ltd.; 90c The Centurion
Club Ltd., St.Albans; 91a Bernard Tschumi; 92b and c Marian Boswall;
93g Clouston; 99c Christopher C. Benson/ KAP Cris; 10809 All images
Bjorbekk & Lindheim AS Landscape Architects; 117 All images Gollifer
Langston Architects; 122 Both images David Watson; 125 European Space
Agency, Galileo; 126 All images Shelley Mosco; 127 Both images David
Watson; 135 D. Paysage; 136a Paddy Clarke; 137b and c Peter Neale;
137d Sue Willmott; 137e London Legacy Development Corporation;
145b Grant Associates; 146c Grant Associates; 165 Olin/ Sahar CostonHardy; 167 All images Kim Wilkie; 171 All images Simon Drury Brown;
172 NASA Earth Observation mission 30 satellite crew photograph; 177
Istock (photographer Joseph Nickischer); 17879 All images Dutch
Ministry of Infrastructure and Environment (Ministerie van Infrastructuur
en Milieu); 18687 All images Khondaker Hasibul Kabir; 19091 Arcadis/
Hoogheemraadschap Hollands Noorderkwartier/ beeldbank.rws.nl
Rijkswaterstaat, the Netherlands.
Jacket image: High Line Park, Manhattan, Cameron Davidson/Corbis
Acknowledgements
The authors acknowledge the patient support, and help and of our
main editor, Peter Jones; our initial editor Liz Faber; our book designer
Michael Lenz; and Philip Cooper, editorial director at Laurence King, who
commissioned us.
This book is dedicated to the Landscape Architecture students at the
University of Greenwich who have inspired and provoked us over
three decades.
208