News

Tubbs' summer internship has become a teachable moment for the whole city. By Anjulie Rao Just east of the White River in ...
Some of the most engaging new playgrounds take their inspiration from nature but are also fantastical worlds of their own. One tiny playground at Presidio Knolls, a Mandarin immersion school in San ...
In 1966, the Hayden Library opened at Arizona State University (ASU) in Tempe. Byron Sampson, ASLA, the university landscape architect, says that with its massive—perhaps even intimidating—presence, ...
SLA’s design for Grønningen-Bispeparken is their “most radical” yet. By Irina Zhorov When rain started falling several days after the opening of Copenhagen’s Grønningen-Bispeparken, an employee from ...
Famed landscape architect Michael Van Valkenburg writes about managing landscapes, including parks and other large design projects over time.
What landscape architects need to know. Designers and advocates reckon with the uneasy history of safety in environmental design. By Karl Krause In 1285, King Edward of England issued the Statute of ...
What landscape architects need to know. Designing for Just and Multifunctional Energy Landscapes By Nicholas Pevzner, Yekang Ko, and Kirk Dimond, ASLA From the June 2021 issue. This article is also ...
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. Stimson takes on the challenges of success by staying true to its New England roots. By Jonathan Lerner Outside the kitchen door of the Massachusetts farm where ...
What landscape architects need to know. This article is also available in Spanish. The design of school grounds is being rethought for many reasons. Claire Latane wants improving students' mental ...
What landscape architects need to know. The recent announcement of Kongjian Yu, FASLA, as the winner of the 2023 Cornelia Hahn Oberlander Prize sent us back to the archives for this piece on his work ...
The Hudson River is tidal, gaining a mean elevation of only two feet for 150-plus miles inland from the Atlantic. It is flanked, almost without interruption, by bluffs and cliffs. Most communities ...