Landscape urbanism

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Landscape Urbanism is a theory of urbanism arguing that landscape, rather than architecture, is more capable of organizing the city and enhancing the urban experience. Landscape urbanism has emerged as a theory in the last ten years and is far from being a coherent doctrine. James Corner, Charles Waldheim, and Mohsen Mostafavi are among the instructors, practitioners, and theorists who have been most responsible for articulating the terms of landscape urbanism. Most of the important projects related to this theory have yet to be built, so design competitions have been the most influential stage for the development of the theory.

Contents

James Corner, in an essay entitled "Terra Fluxus," describes the main qualities of Landscape Urbanism:

  • Surface, not form: horizontality and sprawl in places like Los Angeles, Atlanta, Houston, San Jose, and the suburban fringes of most American cites is the new urban reality. As many theories of urbanism attempt to ignore this fact, landscape urbanism accepts it and tries to understand it. Traditional notions of program and structure are not useful in this diffuse urban condition--their scope is small and limiting. Landscape urbanism uses 'territories' and 'potential' instead of 'program' to define a place's use; it finds thinking in terms of adaptable 'systems' instead of rigid 'structures' as a better way to organize space.
  • Form is the traditional character of the city; formlessness characterizes nature, that which has been untouched by human intent. This city/nature duality is critical to most theories of the city and nature. Landscape urbanists argue that this is duality is naive and argue for a conflation of landscape and building.
  • new working methods:
  • imagination and speculation:

  • Almy, Dean, "Center 14: On Landscape Urbanism", The Center for American Architecture and Design, The University of Texas at Austin, 2007
  • Allen, Stan. "Mat Urbanism: The Thick 2-D." Case: Le Corbusier's Venice Hospital and the Mat Building Revival. Ed. Hashim Sarkis. Munich ; New York: Prestel, 2001.
  • Connolly, Peter, ‘Embracing Openness: Making Landscape Urbanism Landscape Architectural: Part 1 & 2, in Raxworthy, Julian and Blood, Jessica, The Mesh Book: landscape/infrastructure, 76-103, 200-214.
  • Corner, James, and Alan Balfour. Recovering Landscape : Essays in Contemporary Landscape Architecture. New York, NY: Princeton Architectural Press, 1999.
  • Czerniak, Julia. CASE--Downsview Park Toronto. Munich ; New York; Cambridge, Mass.: Prestel; Harvard University, Graduate School of Design, 2001.
  • Kerb Vol.15 Landscape Urbanism (to be launched April 2007). This issue includes contributions from Charles Waldheim, Mohsen Mostafavi, FOA, Karres en Brands, Kongjian Yu, Kyong Park, Kathryn Gustafson, Stephen Read, Kelly Shannon and Richard Weller, Melbourne: RMIT University, School of Architecture + Design, 2007.
  • Koolhaas, Rem. "Atlanta." S,M,L,XL. New York: Monacelli Press, 1999.
  • Mostafavi, Mohsen, Ciro Najle, and Architectural Association. Landscape Urbanism : A Manual for the Machinic Landscape. London: Architectural Association, 2003.

  • Fresh Kills Landfill Competition, Field Operations/James Corner
  • Downsview Park Competition, all finalist entries [1]
  • Parc de la Villette Competition, OMA entry/Rem Koolhaas
  • Schouwburgplein, Rotterdam, West 8/Adriaan Geuze

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