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More articles from ARTICLES

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    From Sacred Grove to National ParkThe Tale of Hurshat Tal in Israel
    Nurit Lissovsky
    Landscape Journal, October 2013, 32 (1) 1-18; DOI: https://doi.org/10.3368/lj.32.1.1
    Nurit Lissovsky
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    Designing with Nature?The persistence of Capability Brown’s 18th century water features
    Kristen Podolak, G. Mathias Kondolf, Louise A. Mozingo, Keith Bowhill and Margaretta Lovell
    Landscape Journal, October 2013, 32 (1) 51-64; DOI: https://doi.org/10.3368/lj.32.1.51
    Kristen Podolak
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    G. Mathias Kondolf
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    Louise A. Mozingo
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    Keith Bowhill
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    Margaretta Lovell
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    Teaching Stream RestorationExperiences from Interdiscipinary Studio Instruction
    G. Mathias Kondolf, Louise A. Mozingo, Karl Kullmann, Joe R. McBride and Shannah Anderson
    Landscape Journal, October 2013, 32 (1) 95-112; DOI: https://doi.org/10.3368/lj.32.1.95
    G. Mathias Kondolf
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    Louise A. Mozingo
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    Karl Kullmann
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    Joe R. McBride
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    Shannah Anderson
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    Foreword
    John Beardsley
    Landscape Journal, March 2012, 31 (1-2) 1-3; DOI: https://doi.org/10.3368/lj.31.1-2.1
    John Beardsley
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    Scoring Collective Creativity and Legitimizing Participatory Design
    Randolph T. Hester
    Landscape Journal, March 2012, 31 (1-2) 135-143; DOI: https://doi.org/10.3368/lj.31.1-2.135
    Randolph T. Hester
    Randolph T. Hester is Director of the Center for Ecological Democracy, Durham, North Carolina; Professor Emeritus at the University of California, Berkeley; and a Founder of SAVE International. An award-winning designer, Hester's built works in Cambridge, Massachusetts, Manteo and Raleigh, North Carolina, Los Angeles, California, and Tainan, Taiwan set precedents for democratic design, environmental justice, and conservation biology. His writing includes classic books on participatory design: Neighborhood Space, Community Design Primer, Democratic Design in the Pacific Rim, Design for Ecological Democracy, and the forthcoming Inhabiting the Sacred. He presently codesigns projects in Fukuoka, Shanghai, Incheon, and Chiayi to save the endangered black-faced spoonbill and related cultures from extinction and works with Durham city staff on park designs to revitalize downtown
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    Halprin in Israel
    Kenneth I. Helphand
    Landscape Journal, March 2012, 31 (1-2) 199-217; DOI: https://doi.org/10.3368/lj.31.1-2.199
    Kenneth I. Helphand
    Kenneth I. Helphand is Knight Professor of Landscape Architecture at the University of Oregon. Helphand is a frequent visiting professor at the Technion—The Israel Institute of Technology. His books include Dreaming Gardens: Landscape Architecture and the Making of Modern Israel (2002), and Defiant Gardens: Making Gardens in Wartime (2006). Helphand has served as editor of Landscape Journal, and is a Fellow of the American Society of Landscape Architects and The Council of Educators in Landscape Architecture. He is also an Honorary Member of the Israel Association of Landscape Architects, a recipient of the Bradford Williams Medal, a Graham Foundation Grant, and former Chair of the Senior Fellows in Garden and Landscape Studies at Dumbarton Oaks
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    Replanting Freeway Park: Preserving a Masterpiece
    lain M. Robertson
    Landscape Journal, March 2012, 31 (1-2) 77-99; DOI: https://doi.org/10.3368/lj.31.1-2.77
    lain M. Robertson
    Iain M. Robertson is an Associate Professor of Landscape Architecture at the University of Washington where he teaches planting design and introductory design studios. His interests have focused on the study of plants as a distinctive design medium. He occasionally consults on the planning and design of arboreta and botanical gardens and other plant-related design projects. He is currently exploring methods for “cultivating” creativity in students from diverse disciplines adapting methods he has developed while teaching design studios. Not unlike Hercules' travails, he labored under the obligations of serving as department chair for several years
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    Water Events: Flow and Collection in Skyline Park
    Ann Komara
    Landscape Journal, March 2012, 31 (1-2) 101-116; DOI: https://doi.org/10.3368/lj.31.1-2.101
    Ann Komara
    Ann Komara is Associate Professor and Chair of Landscape Architecture at University of Colorado Denver. She is the author of Lawrence Halprin's Skyline Park, the first volume in the new Modern Landscapes: Transition and Transformation series, co-produced by Princeton Architectural Press and The Cultural Landscape Foundation
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    Facilitation and/or Manipulation? Lawrence Halprin and ‘Taking Part’
    Alison B. Hirsch
    Landscape Journal, March 2012, 31 (1-2) 117-134; DOI: https://doi.org/10.3368/lj.31.1-2.117
    Alison B. Hirsch
    Alison B. Hirsch has an MLA, an MS in Historic Preservation, and a PhD in Architecture from the University of Pennsylvania. She is a practicing landscape architect in New York City, and also teaches at Pratt Institute and the University of Toronto. Her dissertation has evolved into a forthcoming book, City Choreographer: Lawrence Halprin and Public Performance in Urban Renewal America (Fall 2013). Alison has published extensively on Halprin with particular focus on the development and application of the creative process he conceived with his wife, dancer and choreographer Anna Halprin. In 2007, Alison curated a drawings exhibition, titled “Lawrence Halprin: The Choreography of Gardens,” for the University of Pennsylvania's Kroiz Gallery
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    The Choreography of Memory: Lawrence Halprin's Franklin Delano Roosevelt Memorial
    Reuben M. Rainey
    Landscape Journal, March 2012, 31 (1-2) 161-182; DOI: https://doi.org/10.3368/lj.31.1-2.161
    Reuben M. Rainey
    Reuben M. Rainey, FASLA, is William Stone Weedon Professor Emeritus at the University of Virginia and a former chair of the Department of Landscape Architecture. His publications encompass a wide range of topics, including Italian Renaissance gardens, 19th and 20th century urban parks, the work of 20th century landscape architects, African American gardens, and healing spaces in medical facilities. He has also co-produced the PBS television series GardenStory, exploring the way gardens improve the lives of individuals and their communities. At present he serves as Co-director of the School of Architecture's Center for Design and Health, which promotes cross-disciplinary research on the design of healthy neighborhoods and cities as well as patient-centered healthcare facilities
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