News

Tubbs' summer internship has become a teachable moment for the whole city. By Anjulie Rao Just east of the White River in ...
What landscape architects need to know. “These are lighter because they represent the four elms, and we didn’t want to completely screen out the building, so we have this transparency through those ...
Patience, and the use of native plants, are a big boost to wildlife biodiversity. By Lisa Casey, ASLA The Lurie Garden buzzed with life under the summer sun when I visited last July. As I explored ...
Although our attention to cultural landscapes has evolved, we often approach them in a way that is too narrow in scope, too tightly bound in our own silos, and too unwilling to change in response to ...
What landscape architects need to know. Inside the award-winning new master plan for Pompeii by Studio Bellesi Giuntoli. By Monica Shenouda Pompeii has lured visitors for centuries, offering a ...
What landscape architects need to know. Studio Campo master plans the Rocky Mountain Land Library. By Sarah Chase Shaw About 10 miles southeast of Fairplay, Colorado, lies Buffalo Peaks Ranch. Marked ...
What landscape architects need to know. A KOA site in Maine gets a glow-up into a SITES-certified retreat. By Andrea Timpano With its leafy trees, modest cabins, and open RV and tent sites, Bar Harbor ...
What landscape architects need to know. The country's fiery liquid landscape shifts, on a massive scale. By Michael Dumiak Kristín Jóhannsdóttir woke at two in the morning, looked from her window over ...
After a derecho wreaked havoc in Cedar Rapids, the historic estate Brucemore brought its landscape back to life while preparing for a future of climate chaos.
A group of University of Southern California students spends six days walking the 51 miles of the Los Angeles River and documenting what they found. Once a meandering, transient body of water that ...
In Lake County, Illinois, landscape architects find novel, ecologically-friendly solutions to navigate tricky regulations to restore a 33-acre former farm.
What landscape architects need to know. Only one obstacle stood in the way of a Long Island retreat: a grove of 100-year-old cedars. By Andrea Timpano When an entrepreneur on the hunt for a new home ...