News related to Landscape Architecture

Incorporating More Greenery into Urban Landcapes is Key to Staying Cool

“There are things that landscape architects and urban designers can do to make cities cool, particularly during heat waves,” says landscape architecture professor Bob Brown in the School of Environmental Design and Rural Development.  A leafy canopy creates shelter from the sun's rays.  Not only do they absorb carbon dioxide and produce oxygen, but they can also help keep urban areas cool.

See full article in At Guelph http://atguelph.uoguelph.ca/2013/07/trees-can-help-cities-beat-the-heat/

Cecelia Paine serves as Toronto Urban Design Award Juror

June 13-14, Professor Cecelia Paine, FCSLA, FASLA, OALA, served as a design juror for the 2013 Toronto Urban Design Awards. In addition to Paine, the jury included an urban designer, two architects and a journalist from across Canada.   In total, the jurors reviewed 90 professional entries and 30 student entries. The purpose of the awards is to recognize designers and developers who contribute to the creation of great public spaces.  The Awards Ceremony will take place the evening of Wednesday, September 11, 2013.

Recent MLA graduate to present thesis at ECLAS conference in Germany

Desiree Valadares (MLA 2013), advised by Nate Perkins and Sean Kelly, has been accepted to present her graduate thesis at the 2013 ECLAS (European Council for Landscape Architecture Schools) Conference this September in Hamburg, Germany.  Her thesis involved the compilation of a landscape biography of Ontario Place, a neglected modernist landscape along Toronto's post-industrial waterfront.

Jim Taylor Keynote Speaker of IFLA Africa Symposium

Jim Taylor FCSLA FASLA FCELA, is an invited keynote speaker for the IFLA Africa Symposium to be held from October 14 to 18, 2013 in Logos, Nigeria.  The symposium theme is People and Landscapes and will receive papers on environmental philosophy and theory; productive regional landscapes; urban landscapes; cultural landscapes; and politics, policies and landscape development.  Professor Taylor has served as the Chair of the IFLA Africa Committee responsible for advancing the profession on the continent. 

Datascapes: Landscapes of Information-Mapping the Invisible

Nadia Amoroso, Adjunct Professor at the School of Environmental Design and Rural Development and Co-Founder of Datascapes, will be teaching a one-week professional development credit course "Landscapes of Information - Mapping the Invisible" in Las Vegas, Nevada from August 3-9, 2013.  For more information please see vist the CELA website.

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