Landscape Architecture for Landscape Architects › Forums › SUSTAINABILITY & DESIGN › HiGH QUALITY PUBLIC SPACES
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November 11, 2009 at 7:00 pm #172356condoros andreiParticipant
I was wondering if any of you have informations regarding the bellow subject.
Projects that focus on creating and ensuring high-quality public spaces..spaces understood as the sum of all the cultural, economic, technological, social and ecological aspects…
– qualitative urban spaces
– man-made landscapes
– urban development.. is to be taken into consideration…
Do you know about such projects? strategies? places from where I can take these informations? digital… 🙂
I’m doing right now a research about this topic (found also in the Leipzig charter)Thank you very much
AndrewNovember 11, 2009 at 11:36 pm #172364Les BallardParticipantYes I would love to help but would need a brief and details and the work involved could not be free. Are you making a national park or a smal open space? You are welcome to contact me since I gather there are various moves in your part of europe to do things that have not be en done previously in any proper way and you are all in the first stages of contemplating such schemes. I love to promote areas to include tourism, education and so on so will be happy to help if I can.
Luv n Lite,
Les Ballard
November 12, 2009 at 3:36 am #172363ncaParticipantI was just looking at a book today on the design of Reston, Virginia.
Reston Town Center is a pretty remarkable example of comprehensive urban design and planning for an entire city/community including public spaces.
I cant tell you for sure who did the original master plan, but I know Sasaki Associates did quite a bit.
November 13, 2009 at 1:32 pm #172362Trace OneParticipantI think ‘high quality public spaces’ pretty much sums up the entire profession of Landscape Architecture..so if you want to learn about it, I would recommend a Master’s degree from U of Penn, for starters..or Yale architecture school also has very good landscape architecture history program..
so if you have about three years, at least, I think we could begin to answer your question..November 13, 2009 at 7:21 pm #172361Tracy FinlaysonParticipantHi Andrew and all. I’m replying to Nick’s post about Reston Town Center. Yes, I am from Sasaki, and yes we did do the master plan, and subsequent implementation of the planning, urban design and landscape architecture efforts. Nick, not sure if you are refering to the book published in the last 2 or so years on Reston, editted by Alan Ward, or not. Andrew, contact me if you’d like more info on the project and Sasaki’s involvement. don’t mean to be commercial here, but you can also find info at
www. sasaki.com.
Cheers.November 13, 2009 at 8:27 pm #172360Carol NParticipantReston Virginia in full is a premier example of planning strategy success. Robert E. Simon, Jr. is the developer who bought the land and made the plan with his team. At 95-years young, he still resides here and is very active in the community, thriving with a population of over 55,000 He began by outlining “Seven Goals for the New Town”, which helped to formulate his strategy – “fun”, including recreation and culture, was an important element. Reston Town Center as the urban core of the community was included in his original plan (c. 1963). Mobil Land developed the urban core of Reston Town Center, where the hotel, shops, restaurants, movie theater, office spaces, etc. opened in 1990. Through the late 90’s until 2008, more has been added, including a large amount of residential. http://www.restontowncenter.com shows the shopping & dining areas, etc. You can find much information about Bob’s Seven Goals, Reston’s development, the Genesis of Reston, and more via http://www.restonmuseum.org, or in the Planned Community Archives of George Mason University. Nicholas Bloom published a book in 2001 comparing 3 New Towns in the USA, entitled Suburban Alchemy. (As a layman, I totally enjoyed it.)
November 13, 2009 at 8:28 pm #172359Carol NParticipantPlease see the information provided in Reply to Nick Aceto’s message.
November 13, 2009 at 10:12 pm #172358Trace OneParticipantbut but but – reston is still a bedroom communitiy for wash DC, no? as well as being almost entirely car-based.. Is it really that good? What about forest Hills, NY – much cuter..and on a subway line!
what is the state of ‘celebration, florida’ these days?
when I think of high quality public spaces I think of Gracey Park in Manhattan, of Prospect Park in Brooklyn, with it’s roots in the democratic ideal of open space for the masses, passive recreation and enjoyment of nature in the middle of the city for the masses..I think of Jones Beach and Robert Moses (I know, he had a dark side!) and car-closed Main streets in cities like charlottesville, va..
reston is NOT my first choice – it seems planned, but unfortunately so..better to have concentrated on wash dc. infill, than reston, which to me represents suburban white flight expansion with a gloss of required office space and retail..
(In real life, I have also found, that when you require the office and the retail in a planning, you cannot force it to happen, and it just ends up as whatever it will be)..
tell me I am wrong, I am willing to listen.
🙂December 17, 2009 at 9:23 pm #172357Carol NParticipantLong time no hear from me – my ‘real’ job has been very focused on events. The passing of James Rossant this week prompted me to return here to Land8. Rossant designed Lake Anne’s plaza in Reston in his work with Bob Simon.
I will gladly tell you you’re wrong about Reston being a bedroom community, as at least 60,000 people are employed here, for one thing, in addition to the 60,000 +/- who live here. It’s truly a Live, Work, Play community. I am in no position to debate the advantages of the other fine communities you’ve mentioned, but I don’t think that infill development is nearly as exciting as an entire community that was planned from scratch with one man’s dream – and it is completely successful in all respects.
White flight? No. Reston was touted as the first integrated community in Virginia in the 60’s. Diversity is a strong point here, and one of the many ways we celebrate that is with an annual Multicultural Festival. The broad range of home styles and neighborhoods in the community accommodate every income and social level – tree huggers to tycoons included. The natural landscape of this area was preserved as the homes were built, which is something I appreciate very much. There are 55 miles of trails, both paved and natural, for all kinds of passive recreation, plus pools, tennis courts, tot lots, basketball courts, baseball & soccer fields – all tucked into every neighborhood, for all Restonians to use. There is an impressive population of architects and artists living here, which is a testament in itself.
Glassed over? No. When you’re in the urban core, there is a genuine dowtown vibe. Just as in any fine city I’ve visited, people are here shopping, working, taking their children and dogs for walks. Happy hours and lunchtime are packed with office workers from the buildings here, and they also arrive from the commercial corridor along the Dulles toll road. Families are here dining, visiting special events (acclaimed art, food, pet festivals and more), and celebrating special occasions all through the week.
We have celebrated the openings of 20-story, million dollar condos in the urban core, and just last month the Nature House was completed, for education and respite, at the edge of a 75-acre forest.
The office and retail grew gradually, according to demand, and serves much more than just the residents here. Zoning, which is overseen by the county, is well maintained and has not changed much since this Planned Residential Community was approved in 1963. (Literally a ground-breaking advancement.) Now, Reston is an address with cachet.
Reston will have two Metro Rail stops soon – the rail line is now under construction, after many years delay. And for added convenience for traveling, the airport is just 10 minutes away. Yet, Reston is positioned in such a way that airport noise is not an issue.
This month is the 45th anniversary of Reston ‘pioneers’ who first moved here in 1964 (and never left!) I personally know many worldly people who have lived here at least 40 years – they absolutely love it and have no desire to live anywhere else, though they may have had at least 3 addresses in Reston as they moved from apartment to townhome to detached home (and many empty nesters are now moving into the new condos). Three generations of families have made this their hometown.
Reston may not be your “first choice” example, but it is certainly worth including in research, which is what the original request was for. And, can you argue with proven success? -
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