LL aannddssccaappee AArrcchhiitteeccttuurree AANN IINNTTRROODDUUCCTTIIOONN Published in 2014 by Laurence King Publishing Ltd 361–373 City Road London EC1V 1LR United Kingdom email: [email protected] www.laurenceking.com © text 2014 Robert Holden & Jamie Liversedge All rights reserved. No part of this publication may be reproduced or transmitted in any form or by any means, electronic or mechanical, including photocopy, recording or any information storage and retrieval system, without prior permission in writing from the publisher. Robert Holden and Jamie Liversedge have asserted their right under the Copyright, Designs, and Patents Act 1988, to be identifi ed as the Authors of this Work. A catalogue record for this book is available from the British Library. ISBN: 978 1 78067 270 0 Design: Michael Lenz, Draught Associates Senior editor: Peter Jones Printed in China LL aannddssccaappee AArrcchhiitteeccttuurree AANN IINNTTRROODDUUCCTTIIOONN RRoobbeerrtt HHoollddeenn && JJaammiiee LLiivveerrsseeddggee Contents Introduction What is a landscape architect? 13 How this book is structured 17 1. The History of Landscape Architecture Beginnings 20 The growth of landscape architecture as a profession 24 The growth of the profession in Europe 28 The expansion of the profession worldwide 29 Case study: Painshill Park, Surrey, UK 30 Planning 32 City planning and structural green space 36 Changing styles: from Modernism to Postmodernism and beyond 38 Case study: Emscher Park, Ruhr Valley, Germany 44 Changing priorities: ecology, biodiversity and sustainability 46 Case study: Ijsselmeerpolders, the Netherlands 54 2. Beginning a Project The brief 58 Types of client 65 Case study: Westergasfabriek Park, Amsterdam 66 Fees: how to get paid 68 Case study: Central Park, New York City 70 Site survey 72 Case study: Thames Barrier Park, London 74 3. The Design Process Developing a design 78 Case study: Aphrodite Hills, Cyprus 86 The principles of design 88 Case study: Hedeland Arena, Roskilde, Denmark 104 Human fl ow and natural change 106 Case study: Marketplace and Waterfront, Odda, Norway 108 4. Representing the Landscape Design Drawing and sketchbooks 112 Case study: School Courtyard, London 116 3D modelling and video 119 Photography 122 4 Digital design 123 Building Information Modelling (BIM) 124 Mapping, air photography, satellite imagery and Geographic Information Systems (GIS) 125 Report writing 128 Live presentations 129 Case study: Villa Garden at Aphrodite Hills, Cyprus 130 5. From Design Team to Long-term Landscape Management The stages of work 134 Case study: London 2012 Olympic Park 136 Multi-disciplinary design teams 138 The programme of work and the design team 140 Costing a project 141 Landscape management 147 Case study: The Parks Trust, Milton Keynes, UK 148 Case study: Dr Jac. P. Thijssepark, Amstelveen, the Netherlands 152 6. Education and Employment Applying for a university course 156 Internships and jobs 163 Setting up your own business 164 Marketing 165 Case study: Thames Landscape Strategy 166 A note on professional status: the way the profession is seen worldwide 168 Case study: Druk White Lotus School, Ladakh, India 170 7. The Future A changing environment 174 Some challenges 177 Case study: The Dutch National Water Plan 178 Case study: Floating Gardens, Shad Thames, London 182 Case study: Korail, Dhaka, Bangladesh 186 Case study: North Holland coastline, the Netherlands 190 Recycling and everyday practice 192 Final thoughts 194 Glossary 196 Bibliography 199 Index 204 Picture credits 208 5 IInnttrroodduuccttiioonn What is a landscape architect? 13 How this book is structured 17 Parc Citroën Cévennes, Paris 7 Few lay people really understand what landscape architecture actually A is: something to do with planting schemes, or with laying out the space between buildings? Certainly both of those activities are involved, but the landscape architecture profession is much broader than that. This book aims to give a comprehensive overview of what landscape architecture is and some idea of how it may develop over the next 40 or 50 years. It is addressed in particular to those currently considering entering it as a profession. Put simply, landscape architects plan, and hence landscape architecture is design and manage the landscape. also concerned with urban design. Landscape architecture is an aesthetically While its origins are in design, certain based profession founded on an forms of landscape architecture practice understanding of the landscape. That are planning and management based. understanding requires knowledge of the In some areas such as parks and land sciences, geology, soils, hydrology, gardens there can be an overlap botany, horticulture and ecology, and between garden design and landscape also of biology, chemistry and physics. architecture. Both of the authors of this book, for instance, are landscape Landscape architecture grew out of architects who have designed garden design, and indeed landscape private gardens. Both, however, architecture and garden design continue have also been involved in large-scale to be linked. The critical diff erence planning projects, have undertaken between the two is that gardens tend environmental assessment work and to be enclosed and to be designed have worked on urban design projects. for the private individual, whereas If landscape architecture grew out landscape architecture is concerned of landscape gardening and was with open space, the public realm, and primarily a matter of aesthetics the relationship between mankind’s in the nineteenth century, in the development activities and the natural twentieth century it became more environment. Landscape architecture is ecologically focused. In the twenty- concerned with the public good, with fi rst century it has developed again, community values and with human to become increasingly concerned development and its impact on the with sustainability. It now deals land. The scale of landscape planning with issues such as climate change may be regional or even national: and biodiversity – while, of course, landscape architects can design whole continuing to address visual matters. new agricultural landscapes and forests. It is an applied art based on Landscape embraces the townscape scientifi c understanding. B 8 THE INTERRELATED SYSTEMS OF LANDSCAPE SPACE TIME ECOLOGICAL/ HUMAN/SOCIAL HEALTH VISUAL & HYDROLOGICAL/ SPATIAL NATURAL SETTING PROCESSES CULTURAL/ POLITICAL/ NATURAL HISTORY REGULATORY INFRASTRUCTURE/ UTILITIES TRANSPORT/ CIRCULATORY C Landscape architecture dealing with the public realm: A. The High Line, New York. B. The South Bank, London. Garden design applied to a private development: C. A phrodite Hills resort, Cyprus. Introduction 9