They?re putting the public back in public space
Illustration by George Wylesol
Meet five practitioners who want our shared spaces to be a resource for those who use them Maybe landscape architecture is having a moment: This year, both a Bay Area landscape artist and a Chicago urban designer working in agriculture were deemed geniuses by the MacArthur Foundation. And as the conversation about climate change becomes more urgent, the people who work in and with the elements have become more vital and more vocal participants. Of course ?a moment? in the built environment lasts a long time, and some of those now recognized as trailblazers have been hard at work in the field for years.
It?s in our urban landscapes?parks and playgrounds, public buildings, the waterways in and around our cities?that we feel the clearest and most tangible impacts of architecture and design. So, to close out 2019, we?re highlighting five of the most progressive and promising people and studios doing precisely that kind of work: Bryony Roberts, Studio Ludo, Mia Lehrer, Civitas, and Pamela Conrad. We?ll be profiling one of them each day this week. Whether they?re activating a storied plaza as a means to explore spatial justice, challenging their peers with a tool for tackling climate change, or taking large, complicated projects over the finish line with buy-in from the community, all of these five are out to make public space a resource for the people who use it.
CREDITS
Writers: Jeff Andrews, Diana Budds, Patrick Sisson, Alissa Walker
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