Table of Contents
May 31, 2022; Volume 41,Issue 1
Ardeni, Viola
- You have accessRestricted accessWaymarking Italy’s Influence on the American Environmental Imagination While on Pilgrimage to AssisiViola ArdeniLandscape Journal, May 2022, 41 (1) 119-121; DOI: https://doi.org/10.3368/lj.41.1.119Viola ArdeniViola Ardeni is Lecturer in Italian and the Italian Language Program Coordinator at the University of California, Davis.
Burniske, Gary
- You have accessRestricted accessClimate BufferNetA Gaming Simulation Linking Biodiversity Conservation and Climate Change Adaptation with Agricultural Landscape PlanningAaron William Thompson, Robert Marzec and Gary BurniskeLandscape Journal, May 2022, 41 (1) 45-60; DOI: https://doi.org/10.3368/lj.41.1.45Aaron William ThompsonAaron W. Thompson, PhD, is an assistant professor of horticulture and landscape architecture and director of the Center for Community & Environmental Design at Purdue University.Robert MarzecRobert Marzec, PhD, is a professor of English in the College of Liberal Arts at Purdue University.Gary BurniskeGary Burniske is an assistant director with the International Programs in Agriculture for the College of Agriculture at Purdue University.
Fernandez, Jessica
- You have accessRestricted accessA Framework for Urban ParksUsing Social Media Data to Assess Bryant Park, New YorkJessica Fernandez, Yang Song, Mary Padua and Pai LiuLandscape Journal, May 2022, 41 (1) 15-29; DOI: https://doi.org/10.3368/lj.41.1.15Jessica FernandezDr. Jessica Fernandez is an assistant professor at the University of Georgia. Her research and teaching incorporate contemporary approaches to the creation and assessment of place through emerging applications such as big data and VR/AR. As a licensed landscape architect, she has over a decade of experience working on a variety of nationwide awardwinning projects. She owns ALPHA Design Studio, where she applies her teaching and research in the design and building industry.Yang SongDr. Yang Song is assistant professor of landscape architecture at Texas A & M University and works at the intersection of landscape architecture, community planning, and urban design. His teaching and research activities have a strong focus on the role of public placemaking to community health and resiliency. He has a long-standing interest in the application of digital technology in research and design, especially in the area of social media and the built environment. His research examines the usage of urban parks and streets through the engagement patterns depicted in Instagram, Tripadvisor, and Twitter.Mary PaduaDr. Mary Padua is a licensed landscape architect with decades of experience in the public and private sectors, including running her practice, MGP Studio ART DESIGN RESEARCH. Simultaneously, she is a design educator and professor at Clemson University, where she served four years as chair of the Department of Landscape Architecture. Her practice and research activities focus on human-centered outdoor restorative environments that also intersect with technology. She is internationally recognized as a thought leader, visual artist, and writer who has authored works on China’s vast urban experiment, sociocultural theory, and the meaning of place.Pai LiuDr. Pai Liu is a lecturer at Dalian University of Technology who taught previously at the University of Oklahoma and Clemson University. Dr. Liu obtained her PhD in Planning, Design, and the Built Environment from Clemson University. Her primary research interests are in health care environments, with an emphasis on design for the aging. Her current research projects include comparing elder care environments in the United States and China, investigating the application of cultural design in health care environments, and developing analytical tools for behavior mapping.
- You have accessRestricted accessThe Impact of Virtual Reality on Student Design DecisionsAssessing Density and Proximity When Designing in Virtual Reality Versus Traditional Analog ProcessesBenjamin H. George, Jessica Fernandez and Peter SummerlinLandscape Journal, May 2022, 41 (1) 31-44; DOI: https://doi.org/10.3368/lj.41.1.31Benjamin H. GeorgeBenjamin H. George, PhD, ASLA, is an associate professor in the Landscape Architecture & Environmental Planning Department at Utah State University. His work focuses on the integration of visualization technologies into the design process and the intersection of media and the landscape. He conducts research on the implementation and impact of online education with the design studio. Dr. George has collaborated with a number of leading technology firms, design firms, and botanical gardens.Jessica FernandezDr. Jessica Fernandez is an assistant professor at the University of Georgia. Her research and teaching incorporate contemporary approaches to the creation and assessment of place through big data, VR/AR, and other emerging applications. As a licensed landscape architect, she has over a decade of experience working on a variety of nationwide award-winning projects. She owns ALPHA Design Studio, where she pursues innovative solutions in the design and building industry.Peter SummerlinPeter Summerlin is an associate professor in the Department of Landscape Architecture at Mississippi State University. His work explores contemporary technology as tools for design, discovery, communication, and collaboration in the design process. He is a licensed landscape architect and LEED Accredited Professional with practical experience in both the public and private sector.
Fischer, D. L.
- You have accessRestricted accessSeeing the Petrochemical Landscapes of the BakkenD. L. Fischer and Meghan L. E. KirkwoodLandscape Journal, May 2022, 41 (1) 61-76; DOI: https://doi.org/10.3368/lj.41.1.61D. L. FischerD. L. Fischer is associate professor of landscape architecture and chair of the Department of Landscape Architecture at North Dakota State University. He is an ASLA award-winning landscape architect and currently serves as an architecture and design committee advisor for the Theodore Roosevelt Presidential Library, scheduled to open in Medora, ND in 2025.Meghan L. E. KirkwoodMeghan Kirkwood is an assistant professor of visual arts at Washington University in St. Louis, where she serves as area head of photography. She earned a BFA from Rhode Island School of Design in Photography before completing her MFA in Studio Art at Tulane University and her PhD at the University of Florida. Kirkwood’s photography has been exhibited throughout the United States, Europe, Thailand, Mexico, and South Africa. Her photographic research looks at the ways in which landscape imagery can inform and advance public conversations around land use, infrastructure, and planning.
Franco, Michelle Arevalos
- You have accessRestricted accessInvisible LaborPrecarity, Ethnic Division, and Transformative Representation in Landscape Architecture WorkMichelle Arevalos FrancoLandscape Journal, May 2022, 41 (1) 95-111; DOI: https://doi.org/10.3368/lj.41.1.95Michelle Arevalos FrancoMichelle Arevalos Franco is an assistant professor in landscape architecture at The Ohio State University. Her research commits interdisciplinary design practice to the intersecting projects of justice, anti-colonial relations, and post-capitalist futures. Her most recent landscape designs were for Oehme, van Sweden & Associates in Washington, DC. She holds a master’s degree in landscape architecture from Harvard’s Graduate School of Design, where she received the Peter Walker Partners Fellowship. Prior to that, Franco was program director of The Richard Avedon Foundation in New York and studied photography in the Sonoran Desert, receiving a bachelor’s of fine art (magna cum laude) from the University of Arizona.
George, Benjamin H.
- You have accessRestricted accessThe Impact of Virtual Reality on Student Design DecisionsAssessing Density and Proximity When Designing in Virtual Reality Versus Traditional Analog ProcessesBenjamin H. George, Jessica Fernandez and Peter SummerlinLandscape Journal, May 2022, 41 (1) 31-44; DOI: https://doi.org/10.3368/lj.41.1.31Benjamin H. GeorgeBenjamin H. George, PhD, ASLA, is an associate professor in the Landscape Architecture & Environmental Planning Department at Utah State University. His work focuses on the integration of visualization technologies into the design process and the intersection of media and the landscape. He conducts research on the implementation and impact of online education with the design studio. Dr. George has collaborated with a number of leading technology firms, design firms, and botanical gardens.Jessica FernandezDr. Jessica Fernandez is an assistant professor at the University of Georgia. Her research and teaching incorporate contemporary approaches to the creation and assessment of place through big data, VR/AR, and other emerging applications. As a licensed landscape architect, she has over a decade of experience working on a variety of nationwide award-winning projects. She owns ALPHA Design Studio, where she pursues innovative solutions in the design and building industry.Peter SummerlinPeter Summerlin is an associate professor in the Department of Landscape Architecture at Mississippi State University. His work explores contemporary technology as tools for design, discovery, communication, and collaboration in the design process. He is a licensed landscape architect and LEED Accredited Professional with practical experience in both the public and private sector.
Kirkwood, Meghan L. E.
- You have accessRestricted accessSeeing the Petrochemical Landscapes of the BakkenD. L. Fischer and Meghan L. E. KirkwoodLandscape Journal, May 2022, 41 (1) 61-76; DOI: https://doi.org/10.3368/lj.41.1.61D. L. FischerD. L. Fischer is associate professor of landscape architecture and chair of the Department of Landscape Architecture at North Dakota State University. He is an ASLA award-winning landscape architect and currently serves as an architecture and design committee advisor for the Theodore Roosevelt Presidential Library, scheduled to open in Medora, ND in 2025.Meghan L. E. KirkwoodMeghan Kirkwood is an assistant professor of visual arts at Washington University in St. Louis, where she serves as area head of photography. She earned a BFA from Rhode Island School of Design in Photography before completing her MFA in Studio Art at Tulane University and her PhD at the University of Florida. Kirkwood’s photography has been exhibited throughout the United States, Europe, Thailand, Mexico, and South Africa. Her photographic research looks at the ways in which landscape imagery can inform and advance public conversations around land use, infrastructure, and planning.
Kuper, Rob
- You have accessRestricted accessPolicy BriefAlternatives to In-Person American Society of Landscape Architects Conferences on Landscape ArchitectureRob KuperLandscape Journal, May 2022, 41 (1) 77-93; DOI: https://doi.org/10.3368/lj.41.1.77Rob KuperRob Kuper is a licensed landscape architect in the Commonwealth of Pennsylvania and an associate professor of landscape architecture at Temple University. He Received a BS in Environmental Design and an MLA from Auburn University. Past research interests generally involved the perception of landscapes, specifically with regard to time. His current and future research focuses on greenhouse gas emissions related to landscape architectural teaching and practice.
Lagro, James
- You have accessRestricted accessEditor’s IntroductionJames LaGro Jr.Landscape Journal, May 2022, 41 (1) iv; DOI: https://doi.org/10.3368/lj.41.1.iv
- You have accessRestricted accessAbout This IssueJames LaGro Jr.Landscape Journal, May 2022, 41 (1) v; DOI: https://doi.org/10.3368/lj.41.1.v
Little, Sarah
- You have accessRestricted accessSmall-Scale Urban GreeningCreating Places of Health, Creativity, and Ecological SustainabilitySarah LittleLandscape Journal, May 2022, 41 (1) 115-116; DOI: https://doi.org/10.3368/lj.41.1.115Sarah LittleSarah Little, PhD, PLA, is a registered landscape architect, an assistant professor of landscape architecture at the University of Oklahoma, and a community engagement fellow of the Institute for Quality Communities. She has authored many publications and co-edited the Routledge Handbook of Designing Public Spaces for Young People: Processes, Practices and Policies for Youth Inclusion, which was released in summer 2020. Through her research, she works to understand the influence of the physical environment on human development. Her current research interests involve children’s autonomous exploration of the built environment, accessible play environments, and behavior mapping.