A New Series Featuring Laurie Olin, Acclaimed Landscape Architect

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The Cultural Landscape Foundation recently launched its newest documentary as part of the ongoing Oral History series, this time focusing on the ideas and career of Laurie Olin, a recipient of the National Medal of the Arts and one of the greatest landscape architects of our time. Olin’s influential work as a practitioner, educator and author over the past forty years has helped to guide the future of landscape architecture and shape urban life around the world.

Shot in 29 segments totaling more than 90 minutes, the documentary is multiple interviews in which Olin discusses his philosophy, life, and influences. Jumping from the OLIN studio in Philadelphia to projects at , Bryant Park, and Columbus Circle in New York City, the oral history includes Olin’s study and work at the University of Washington with Richard Haag, fellowships and travel in England and Italy, his professorship at the University of Pennsylvania and other significant milestones. The video also includes interviews with OLIN partners, from Lucinda Sanders to Susan Weiler and Dennis McGlade.

The series is an outgrowth of the Pioneers of American Landscape Design Project, formatted to examine each designer’s personal and professional history, their overall design philosophy and how that approach was carried out in their most emblematic projects. Richly edited, the video segments include never before seen archival footage, new photography, and on‐location videography.

“Laurie Olin is a towering and enormously influential figure in the landscape architecture profession and one of its most esteemed practitioners – an erudite thought leader, a terrific designer, and a compelling speaker,” said Charles A. Birnbaum, TCLF founder and president. “When Laurie discusses his work and influences we all go on an extraordinary and revelatory voyage that touches on fascinating moments in history, literature, art, music and design – there’s no one quite like him.”

A downloadable transcript of the complete interview is available here, as are reflections by Olin’s friends, family, colleagues, collaborators and co-workers about his life, career and legacy.

Laurie Olin is currently a professor of Landscape Architecture at the University of Pennsylvania and is the former chair of the Department of Landscape Architecture at Harvard University. He is a fellow of the American Academy of Arts and Sciences, a Fellow of the American Society of Landscape Architects and the recipient of the 1998 Award in Architecture from the American Academy of Arts and Letters and the Design Medal from the American Society of Landscape Architects in 2005. Olin is also the author of many books and has written extensively on the history and theory of landscape design.

Check out the video series here, and more about Laurie Olin here.

is a 15-year-old non-profit foundation that provides people with the ability to see, understand and value landscape architecture and its practitioners, in the way many people have learned to do with buildings and their designers. Through its Web site, lectures, outreach and publishing, TCLF broadens the support and understanding for cultural landscapes nationwide to help safeguard our priceless heritage for future generations.

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HAO Makes Counter-Proposal To Save Sugar Factory from Development in Brooklyn

HAO, together with community group, Williamsburg Independent People, hope to save the historic Domino Sugar Factory site and halt the current masterplan by SHoP Architects which proposes an additional 2,200 luxury apartments along the East River in Brooklyn, New York.

HAO’s counter proposal seeks to adaptively reuse the existing factory buildings, including the iconic Civil War-era Domino Sugar Refinery — which has defiantly held its ground amidst heavy redevelopment in surrounding areas. Not unlike SHoP’s proposal, HAO aims to regenerate these spaces into a “world-class cultural destination” that combines public and private programs.

The difference, however, is in scale. The current master plan envisions five residential towers that rise 600 feet to, according to SHoP, create “a new skyline for Brooklyn — one that relates to the height of the Williamsburg Bridge and scales down to meet the neighborhood.”

The counter proposal is a defiantly smaller scale — adapting to the average building heights of the surrounding area – reminiscent of Beijing’s 798 Art District with Bauhaus-inspired, sawtooth-like roof-scoops. “We explored possibilities that would open up the site and create a vibrant, mixed and cultural destination. We believe that, destinations like the 798 Art District and the Tate Modern, the Domino Sugar Factory has the potential to attract millions of visitors every year.”

HAO’s counter proposal captures approximately 700,000 square feet of publicly accessible gallery space (surpassing even the MoMA by 70,000 square feet). The proposal divides the site into two general zones: a green energy technology center, educational, community and hotel-driven programming are located near the south; to the north, publicly accessible private museum space, exhibition and theater space.

For now, the counter proposal is merely an alternative. HAO and local Brooklynites, however, believe that to create a sustainable and revitalized Williamsburg, the city should reconsider caving in to mega-luxury-developments.

Review SHoP’s master plan and learn more about the counter proposals at SaveDomino.org.

HAO Makes Counter-Proposal To Save Sugar Factory from Development in Brooklyn Courtesy of HAO
HAO Makes Counter-Proposal To Save Sugar Factory from Development in Brooklyn Courtesy of HAO
HAO Makes Counter-Proposal To Save Sugar Factory from Development in Brooklyn Courtesy of HAO
HAO Makes Counter-Proposal To Save Sugar Factory from Development in Brooklyn Courtesy of HAO
HAO Makes Counter-Proposal To Save Sugar Factory from Development in Brooklyn Courtesy of HAO
HAO Makes Counter-Proposal To Save Sugar Factory from Development in Brooklyn Courtesy of HAO
HAO Makes Counter-Proposal To Save Sugar Factory from Development in Brooklyn Courtesy of HAO
HAO Makes Counter-Proposal To Save Sugar Factory from Development in Brooklyn Courtesy of HAO
HAO Makes Counter-Proposal To Save Sugar Factory from Development in Brooklyn Courtesy of HAO
HAO Makes Counter-Proposal To Save Sugar Factory from Development in Brooklyn Courtesy of HAO
HAO Makes Counter-Proposal To Save Sugar Factory from Development in Brooklyn Courtesy of HAO
HAO Makes Counter-Proposal To Save Sugar Factory from Development in Brooklyn Courtesy of HAO
HAO Makes Counter-Proposal To Save Sugar Factory from Development in Brooklyn Courtesy of HAO
HAO Makes Counter-Proposal To Save Sugar Factory from Development in Brooklyn Courtesy of HAO
HAO Makes Counter-Proposal To Save Sugar Factory from Development in Brooklyn Courtesy of HAO
HAO Makes Counter-Proposal To Save Sugar Factory from Development in Brooklyn Courtesy of HAO
HAO Makes Counter-Proposal To Save Sugar Factory from Development in Brooklyn Courtesy of HAO
HAO Makes Counter-Proposal To Save Sugar Factory from Development in Brooklyn Courtesy of HAO
HAO Makes Counter-Proposal To Save Sugar Factory from Development in Brooklyn Courtesy of HAO

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On View> Artists Helping Defy Philly’s Second City Status in “Citywide” Exhibition

It has long seemed that Philadelphia’s cultural community was destined to exist forever in New York’s shadow. Though it has had through its history great flourishes of home-grown creativity from Thomas Eakins and Frank Furness, great institutions like The Pennsylvania Academy of Fine Art and collections like the Barnes Foundation and the Annenberg. These were still […]

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“Urban Fold” Paper City Creator Set Puts Twist on Traditional Building Blocks

In a hybrid of LEGO and origami, Paper Punk has created their first boxed set of punch-and-fold, customizable paper building blocks. Urban Fold is the California-based company’s newest creation by founder Grace Hawthorne, a designer, author, and artist from San Francisco who currently teaches at Stanford University’s d.school (Institute of Design). The set gives builders […]

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October Architecture Billings Slow After Months of Strong Figures

After a three-month streak of positive growth, the Architecture Billings Index revealed a small dip in the demand for design services. The ABI score slid down from 54.3 in September to 51.6 in October (any score above 50 indicates an increase). AIA Chief Economist Kermit Baker said that the tumultous political climate—read Government Shutdown—contributed to the […]

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Andropogon’s Dual Design for Sustainability, Recreation in Philly

The Philadelphia Water Department wanted a 3 million gallon sewer overflow tank. Neighbors wanted maintenance of current community recreational space. Now, landscape architecture firm Andropogon has split the difference for Philadelphia residents concerned with the fate of Lower Venice Island. Using high performance landscape design, the firm has envisioned the 5-acre island between the Schuylkill River […]

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Giant wood statues appear in New York

These eighteen foot high wooden sculptures created by artist KAWS are currently on display at the Mary Boone Gallery in New York.

Description

KAWS’s signature COMPANION figure appears in two new sculptures fabricated in wood – each over eighteen feet high – that rise to the ceiling of the soaring skylit space. In ALONG THE WAY, a pair of the figures, heads lowered and one arm on each other’s back, embrace in a pose of gentle solace. The other work, AT THIS TIME, presents Companion standing alone with head arched back and hands covering the eyes. The posture at once conveys a reluctance to face the world and a withdrawal from what has already been witnessed.

KAWS was born in 1974 in Jersey City, New Jersey, and is based in Brooklyn, New York City. Since receiving his BFA from Manhattan’s School of Visual Arts in 1996, he has continued to refine his transformations of icons of popular culture into characters that have in their own right become instantly recognizable.

The Mary Boone Gallery exhibition, at 541 West 24 Street, will remain on view through 21 December 2013.

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Photography courtesy of Mary Boone Gallery.

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Piedmont Residence by Carlton Architecture+Design

Carlton Architecture+Design have recently completed the Piedmont Residence, a modern lake house located in the foothills of the Blue Ridge Mountains in North Carolina.

Description from the architect

The residence overlooks a mountain lake with expansive mountain views beyond. The design ties the home to its surroundings and enhances the ability to experience both home and nature together.

The entry level serves as the primary living space and is situated into three groupings; the Great Room, the Guest Suite and the Master Suite. A glass connector links the Master Suite, providing privacy and the opportunity for terrace and garden areas.

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Architect: Carlton Architecture+Design

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Architects in Love

In this pilot episode Robert Slinger talks about the Kreuzberg Tower, where he lived on the eighth floor for more than eight years. The project which consists of a tower and its two wings was a social housing project-cum-student-residences built by the architect, educator and poet John Hejduk.

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