Landscape Architecture Magazine V.103 N°2 (2013)


LAM

10 Land Matters

16 Letters

Foreground

22 Now
Cleaning up Baltimore’s harbor may involve floating a wetland in a marina; a fungus has arrived in Britain and is killing the country’s ash trees; the battle over invasive bamboo goes legal, and more
Edited by Linda McIntyre

34 SPECIES
Advances in DNA analysis and millions of unclassified species energize and torment biologists.
By Constance Casey

38 SITES
Welcome back, Nature
A pioneering SITES project gets a three star certification and ties a corporate campus to its region´s ecology
By David R. Macaulay

50 GOODS
Great Dividers

Boundaries can be beautiful
By Lisa Speckhardt

FEATURES

Turenscape: Big in China

56 The Phenomenal doctor Yu
By William S. Saunders

60 A Ribbon runs throught it
Chinese opera in a Xuzhou park
By James Grayson Trulove

70 All work
Shanghai’s Houtan Park could be more eager to please
By Sarah Williams Goldhagen

80 Bridge to somewhere else
How to forget Tianjin – fast
By Mary G. Padua, ASLA

88 Look. Don’t touch
At qunli Stormwater Park, the draw of the impenetrable
By James Grayson Trulove

98 Triptych by the sea
Life returns to the shore of Qinhuangdao
By Mary G. Padua, ASLA

108 Homegrown
Kongjian Yu’s apartment puts 50 tons of rainwater to use
By James Grayson Trulove

THE BACK

114 The great exchange
Eight academics and practitioners talk about the evolution of ladscape architecture education in China
By Daniel Jost, ASLA

124 Books
How are we Doing?

A review of Private Paradise: Contemporary American Gardens by Charlotte M.Freize and Landscape Architecture Now!
By William S. Saunders

148 Display ad index

149 Buyer’s guide index

160 Backstory

Best Laid Plan
The author and planner Thomas D.Wilson wants modern planners to reconsider the merits of a plan from 1733
By Linda McIntyre

Publicado por | 13 de marzo de 2013 - 08:32 | Actualizado: 13 de marzo de 2013 - 08:32 | PDF

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