Eligibility criteria: Mandatory for 1st year students in the International Master of Landscape Architecture, open to candidates in the PhD program, and to 1st and 2nd year students in the Master of Architecture
Desired qualifications (non-obligatory): GIS (intermediate level), Rhino 3D modelling, Adobe Suite, interest and affinity for text/discourse analysis
This research seminar trains students to decipher and develop an understanding of landscape as a nested framework of design agencies and potentials, generative across layers and scales — from material agency to territorial structure, from ecosystemic constituents to habitat formations. A global selection of notable bodies of modernist and contemporary landscape architecture and landscape-driven urban design shall serve as the frame for this investigation. Parallel to the analysis of these germinal projects, students shall do close readings of key texts in contemporary landscape theory and landscape urbanist thought, as well as precedent discourse. The objectives are: to deconstruct the ‘gazes,’ or operative concepts, that design practitioners construct in regard to landscape and the urban process, and to critically assess the strategies and methods they use to enhance or restore landscape’s context-specific capacity as agent, medium, and field of relations.
Students will gain insight in the epistemologies, concepts, techniques, and procedural frameworks that support contemporary landscape architecture and landscape-driven urban design. Furthermore, they will develop an expanded conceptual background on which to critique existing regulatory frameworks of land use, urban, and regional planning. Finally, students will be asked to speculate further on which methodological innovations and pedagogical formats can aid their own search for more precise problem definitions and design strategies towards desired socio-environmental and political futures.
Teaching format: Digital, with occasional meetings in person, as practicable
Evaluation criteria: Students will be evaluated on the basis of response papers, visualization/mapping exercises, and in-class discussions. Attendance is mandatory
Form of assessment | Grouping | Grading scale | Comment |
---|---|---|---|
Project assignment | Individual | Pass / fail |