Dive into the archives.
- Johnpaul Jones talk - 25 August
Johnpaul Jones of Seattle’s Jones & Jones Architects and Landscape Architects will speak at 6:15 p.m. Monday, Aug. 25 at the AIA Center for Architecture, 403 N.W. 11th Ave., in Portland.
Admission is $7. For more information, call 503-223-8757.
SOURCE: Article Details - Daily Journal of Commerce.
- ASLA presenters announced - register early to save $50
If you haven’t already done so, I encourage you to register to join the largest gathering of landscape architecture professionals in the world at the 2008 ASLA Annual Meeting and EXPO, October 3-7, in Philadelphia. You don’t want to miss this year’s exciting lineup of events, education sessions, and speakers. Register online by August 27 […]
- Terra Eden Landscaping & Design, Inc. Announces Podcast On OASIS Rainwater Recycling System : published at CarolinaNewswire.com - Stay on top of the day’s business & technology news
Terra Eden Landscaping & Design, a Raleigh landscaping and design firm offering customized and cost-effective solutions to lawn hydration, has announced the release of a podcast on the OASIS Rainwater Recycling System. In this podcast, president Ross Embler explains how the OASIS Rainwater Recycling System works and the differences between OASIS and conventional rain barrels. […]
- ASLA launch Annual Meeting and EXPO website
The ASLA Annual Meeting and EXPO web site is now open for business and I’d like to invite you to join us in Philadelphia, October 3-7. In the next few days, you will be receiving the print registration brochure in the mail as well. These contain all the info you need to register for the […]
- 50 Attend Pervious Concrete Workshop in Connecticut
“Magic” was the word that many thought of during a demonstration of pervious concrete at a workshop held in the spring at Central Connecticut State University and Tilcon Connecticut, both of New Britain, Conn.
The workshop was part of a nationwide series entitled “Pervious Concrete — A Storm-water Solution” presented by the Sustainable Land Development International, […]
- The New York Times Critic to Discuss Green Architecture on April 17
Nicolai Ouroussoff, the chief architecture critic for The New York Times, will discuss green architecture on Thursday, April 17, at SUNY Cortland.Ouroussoff, who has written a number of articles pertaining to the green architectural movement for The New York Times magazine, will begin at 4:30 p.m. in Sperry Center, Room 105.The lecture, which continues the […]
- Landscape architect focuses on enhancing quality of urban life
Patricia O’Donnell, principal of Heritage Landscapes, spoke about preserving and sustaining the issues in cultural landscapes during the final lecture of the University of Rhode Island Landscape Architecture Lecture Series last night at the Coastal Institute on the URI Narragansett Bay Campus.
Her main focus of the lecture was a discussion about how “to enhance the […]
- Cornelia Oberlander lecture - Palm Springs
Landscape architect Cornelia Oberlander lectures on “Aesthetics and Sustainability” at 7 p.m. Palm Springs Art Museum, 101 Museum Drive, Palm Springs. $5 to $10. (760) 322-4800.
- Massachusetts-based firm speaks at Landscape Architecture Series - Campus
Richard “Skip” Burck, the owner of Richard Burck Associates, a Massachusetts-based landscape architecture firm, explained guiding principles behind his business’s practices last night at the University of Rhode Island Coastal Institute.
Burck said environmental sustainability and dynamic viewpoints were two of the chief elements he and his associates consider when working on a landscape project.
Citing two […]
- Exhibition offers new views of suburbia - Los Angeles Times
That’s the guiding idea, anyway, behind “Worlds Away: New Suburban Landscapes” at the Walker Art Center through Aug. 17. Echoing the populism of Robert Venturi’s hugely influential declaration in his 1966 book “Complexity and Contradiction in Architecture” that “Main Street is almost all right,” the exhibition sets out to convince the museum’s sophisticated, largely urban […]


