The designer and author discusses the second phase of a movement begun over a decade ago to move healing landscapes into the ...
As global attention shifts daily from one crisis to another, it is easy to lose focus on what a United Nations official calls the greatest threat the world has ever faced: climate change. Devastating ...
Active public engagement is one of the key ingredients for creating great community spaces. For landscape architects, this engagement requires more than simply capturing dialogue; we must bring ideas ...
On the banks of the Merrimack River roughly 30 miles north of Boston, Lowell is a city of 120,000 people that played a sizable role in expanding the nation’s industrial economy in the 1800s. The river ...
Integrating solar power into the infrastructure of communities is a necessary step toward sustainability, but that pioneering path has not always been a smooth one. Beaumont, California—a small city ...
Landscape Architecture Magazine is seeking an editor for its front-of-book section The front-of-book editor oversees the magazine’s “news” coverage, which ranges from newly completed projects to ...
The Eaton Fire stalled earlier plans to upgrade Charles White Park, but now SALT and Disney are among those reviving and expanding the vision. Charles White Park in Altadena, California, exemplifies ...
In Richmond, Virginia, nature and industry collide in dramatic, obvious ways. Only a few blocks from the nexus of history represented by Monument Avenue and Arthur Ashe Boulevard, a series of bridges ...
If you look closely, three of the cylindrical concrete stools arranged on the sidewalk in front of Love Bank Park in St. Louis are different from the rest. They’re smaller and a little misshapen, the ...
In just a few years, artificial intelligence has transformed the way design firms do business. Balancing back-office gains with mounting costs will take longer. “We jumped in with both feet in 2025.” ...
Mithun centers deaf and hard of hearing spatial experiences in a new campus landscape for the Washington School for the Deaf. Perched on a bluff overlooking the Columbia River, the Washington School ...
For many landscape architects, it has become increasingly common to analyze a site from the comfort of a computer, relying on GIS or secondary sources to inform their understanding of a landscape.