描述
MAY 2019
14 Inside
18 Land Matters
22 Letters
FOREGROUND
28 Now
Record rainfall clouds the Chesapeake Bay; a Florida art museum opens its street edges; a Utah competition aims for inclusion; and more.
Edited by Timothy A. Schuler
48 Interview
What Makes Us Us
Julian Raxworthy talks about the proletarian roots of his new book, Overgrown.
By Zach Mortice
56 Waste
Hog-Tied
A few landscape architects have begun to focus on the huge ecological hazards of animal waste from agriculture operations.
By Timothy A. Schuler
66 Habitat
Linked In
A Seattle neighborhood is the starting point of the artist Sarah Bergmann’s realization of a living network called Pollinator Pathways.
By Katharine Logan
76 Goods
Surface Level
Heavy-duty pavers and a living wall system to lift the background view.
By Emily Cox
FEATURES
86 MLA ROI
Although the landscape architecture profession is poised to grow, master’s degree programs are struggling to gain enrollments. One major reason is the cost and eventual payoff of pursuing a degree.
By Brian Barth
94 Refuge Found
Outside Denver, Rocky Mountain Arsenal Wildlife Refuge, a Design Workshop project that received the 2018 ASLA Landmark Award, continues to rebuild a high-prairie ecosystem scorched by weapons and chemical production.
By Scott Kirkwood
112 Twice Bitten
Two flash floods in three years gutted the historic heart of Ellicott City, Maryland. Mahan Rykiel Associates is working to help the town figure out how to meet a future of extreme weather.
By Jared Brey
THE BACK
134 Garden Punk
In Australia, the landscape designer and writer Georgina Reid searches for the whys of gardening.
By Jennifer Reut
148 Books
Leveling the Fields
A review of Environmental Design: Architecture, Politics, and Science in Postwar America by Avigail Sachs.
By Justin Parscher, Affiliate ASLA
178 Advertiser Index
179 Advertisers by product category
192 Backstory
Combining Confluences
A brewery and a landscape architecture firm team up to help a waterway.
By Emily Cox





