2
FLOWSCAPES
INFRASTRUCTURE AS LANDSCAPE
LANDSCAPE AS INFRASTRUCTURE
GRADUATION LAB
LANDSCAPE ARCHITECTURE
SEMESTERGUIDE MSC 3&4
2012 - 2013
Steffen Nijhuis
Daniel Jauslin
Christopher de Vries
Delft University of Technology, Faculty of Architecture
Department of Urbanism, Chair of Landscape Architecture
in cooperation with:
3
Graduation lab landscape architecture
SemesterGuide MSc 3+4: 2012-2013
flowScapeS
Infrastructure as Landscape
Landscape as Infrastructure
responsible chair:
Dirk Sijmons
professor of landscape architecture
Lab coordinator:
Steffen Nijhuis
assistant professor of landscape architecture
[email protected]
Delft University of Technology,
faculty of architecture
Department of Urbanism,
chair of landscape architecture
text:
Steffen Nijhuis, assistant professor TU Delft
Daniel Jauslin, researcher and lecturer TU
Delft
christopher de Vries, urban designer european
Infrastructure lab
Lay Out:
emma ottevanger
Version:
September 2012
copyright:
2012 by authors and TU Delft.
all rights reserved.
picture front page:
observation of Urban
Setting
(petra Kempf (2009) You
are the city. observation,
organization and
Transformation of Urban
Settings. Baden, lars
Muller publishers’
4
coNTeNT
Graduation lab
8 Graduation Lab
ar3la010
Design Studio
12 Introduction
14 Landscape Infrastructure
16 transportation Infrastructure
22 Green Infrastructure
28 Water Infrastructure
34 spatial framework: rhine-danube corridor
40 5 Metropolitan areas, 10 projects
54 recommended Literature
58 Overview and structure of the studio
62 expected products
CONTENT
ar3la020
72
74
74
74
75
75
research methodology in
landscape architecture
subject
course content
Overview and structure of the course
expected products
Learning Objectives
recommended Literature
ar3la030
Design with Natural processes
78 subject
80 course content
80 Overview and structure of the course
80 expected products
80 Learning Objectives
80 recommended Literature
ar3la040
Space and Society
84 subject
86 course content
86 Overview and structure of the course
86 expected products
86 Learning Objectives
87 recommended Literature
90 schedule Msc3
picture next page:
Het Zwin
(rijkswaterstaat)
5
Graduation lab
6
7
GraDUaTIoN laB
The landscape architecture graduation
laboratory explores spatial, societal and
environmental issues by design research and
research-by-design approaches. It addresses
landscape architecture themes and projects
from different perspectives and in various
contexts.
The core of the graduation lab is a design studio
(ar3la010; 15 ecTS) complemented with the
related courses:
research methodology in landscape architecture
(ar3la020; 5 ecTS), design with natural
processes (ar3la030; 5 ecTS) and space and
society (ar3la040; 5 ecTS).
GRADUATION
LAB
8
Structure of the landscape architecture
graduation laboratory:
ar3la010
ar3la020
design studio
research methodology in Landscape architecture
15 ects
5 ects
ar3la030
design with natural processes
5 ects
ar3la040
space and society
5 ects
picture next page:
(ariel Huber)
9
Graduation lab
10
11
INTroDUcTIoN
AR3LA010
DESIGN STUDIO
TUTOR TEAM
STEFFEN NIJHUIS
DANIEL JAUSLIN
CHRISTOPHER DE VRIES (EUFRALAB)
EXTERNAL REFEREES
PIERRE BÉLANGER,
ULF HACKAUF
DIRK SIJMONS
The studio explores infrastructure as a type of
landscape and landscape as a type of infrastructure (cf. Strang, 1996). The hybridization of
the two concepts seeks to redeine infrastructure beyond its strictly utilitarian deinition,
while allowing landscape design to gain operative force in territorial transformation processes. Through focusing on landscape architectonic design of transportation-, green- and water
infrastructures the studio aims to develop
innovative spatial armatures that guide urban
and rural development and represent their civic
and cultural signiicance.with movement and
lows at the core, landscape infrastructures facilitate aesthetic, functional, social and ecological relationships between natural and human
systems. Through design-based case studies
at different scale levels the studio seeks for a
better understanding of the dynamic between
landscape processes and typo-morphological
aspects; here interpreted as lowscapes.
The studio is concerned with the design of new
topographies by integrating new programs
into the ‘genius of place’ and time, and with
regard to landscape processes, the continuation of spatial quality and cultural identity of
the landscape. It does this through the development of landscape architectural concepts,
methods and techniques for design research
and research-by-design. our landscape architectonic design explorations require a multilayered understanding of landscape: its spatial
structure or visual landscape, history, context,
or relational system and involve the underlying
the ecological, economic and social processes.
In this process visual thinking and communication are considered to be crucial. Drawings,
mappings and models are used to reveal and
create relationships, explore and elaborate
landscape systems as lows in terms of geometry, quantity, velocity, force, trajectory.
Such speciically developed design techniques should become accurate tools for critical
relection.
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four perspectives on landscape which together
characterize the work of landscape architects
(Nijhuis 2006; Marot 1999; prominski 2005):
Landscape as spatio-visual structure
The visual form of the landscape is based on
the sensorial experience that emerges only by
movement and is affected by the position and
intensity of light sources. The act of perceiving
is linked with the sequential unfolding of
information as our bodies pass through space.
Landscape as palimpsest
The landscape as an expression of historical
culture, or as a palimpsest that evidences all of
the activities that contributed to the shaping of
the landscape. In this respect the Genius loci
(topos + locus) is an important basis and where
operations of erasing and writing history add
new layers to the landscape.
Landscape as scale-continuum
The landscape as relational structure is
connecting scales and spatial, ecologic,
functional and social entities. The continuum
across scales facilitates attachment,
connection or embedding of a speciic site or
location into the broader context.
Landscape as ecologic, economic and social
process
landscape and landscape construction is
regarded as a process rather than as a product.
projects play a role as a open-ended strategy,
as in staging or setting up future conditions.
The landscape is a expression of the dynamic
interaction between biotic, a biotic en
anthropogenic factors.
picture top:
aerial picture of los
angeles
(edward-Burtynsky)
13
picture bottom:
View from the road
(Daniel Jauslin)
LANDSCAPE
INFRASTRUCTURES
picture:
Studio GSD, Maasvlakte
(Delanger et al, 2010)
14
Social, cultural and technological
developments of our society are demanding a
fundamental review of the planning and design
of its landscapes, in particular in relation
to environmental issues and sustainability.
Urbanization, ecological crisis and climate
change are several of the contemporary
challenges that demand an international
perspective. while the technical challenges
may be considerable, the spatial and cultural
challenges are by far the largest. Therefore
a renewed understanding of space-time
condition of landscape – and its potential
for change offers promising opportunities to
ind resolution to these problems. In order to
redeem control over the processes that shape
the built environment and its contemporary
landscapes a fundamental review of the agency
of landscape architectonic design is required.
Infrastructure over the last centuries was in
service of the conquest of nature, whereby
the environment was denied its natural
dynamism in favour of more controlled and
static systems. However, widespread insights
into the potentially irreversible harm this
paradigm has done to natural systems is
now manifest in a growing awareness that
we have to create more harmonious forms
of urban landscape architecture. european
diplomatic policy between members and
within the UN, has taken a leading role in the
global discussion on sustainability that has
become so important in the last 20 years. The
eU adopted many regulations and committed
itself to far reaching goals in preventing
climate change for example. In infrastructure
the most symbolic, inancially largest and for
citizens most tangible european projects are
not only crucial to the success of our continent
but will need to take a global benchmark
position in protecting vulnerable landscapes.
europe is urged to prove its political will with
integral solutions and smart design. Moreover
in global competition infrastructures are
crucial for the economic welfare of a region,
which is recognized by a largely supported
political consensus across ideological or
political borders. But the economical priority
for development is questioned by many –
infrastructural development as landscape is
also questioning what alternatives do we have
in our future environment.
Infrastructures are understood as “constructed
facilities and natural features that shelter and
support most human activities: buildings of all types,
communications, energy generation and distribution,
green spaces, transportation of all modes, water
resources, and waste treatment and management”
(perSI, 2012). landscape on the other hand is
deined as: “an area, as perceived by people, whose
character is the result of the action and interaction of
natural and/or human factors” (council of europe,
2000). as such, the current understanding
describes infrastructure as the human
impetus to alter the natural environment, while
landscapes are described as the inadvertent
resultants. The hybridization of the two
concepts, landscape and infrastructure, seeks
to redeine both notions into a more integral
design assignment where goals and means
converge: where the resultant landscape and
the desire to overcome geography for human
occupancy are consciously designed to serve
multiple ends. The emphasis here is on the
interaction of humans with their environment
(e.g. connecting people to landscapes,
structuring the urban tissue), biodiversity and
the relation between ‘lows’ and ‘scapes’.
landscape infrastructures actually integrate
lows and scapes. The lows are movements/
processes and the scapes are the spatial
entities (e.g. territories). Interaction is taking
place by lows between natural and human
systems. Six vectors are important in this
respect: water, wind, lora, fauna, humans and
machines. Micro organisms, plants, animals
and people move between ecosystems at
different speeds. wind carries heat, sound,
gases, aerosols, and particles between spatial
entities. water lows between ecosystems as
surface or subsurface low. The scapes are the
spatio-morphological patterns and structures
as a result of cultural, socioeconomic,
functional and aesthetic forces. These scapes
deliver important services for provisioning
(food, energy, fresh water, etc.), support
(production, nutrient cycling, etc.), sociocultural aspects (leisure, recreation, education,
health, aesthetics, etc.) and regulation
(climate, lood, water and air puriication, etc.)
of urban and rural landscapes.
Flowscapes also addresses landscape
processes as typo-morphological aspects. It
considers these landscape infrastructures as
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landscape architectonic design assignment,
in order to provide for a long term direction
to more volatile forms of urban landscape
architecture. In this view important principles
for planning and design are: multifunctionality,
connectivity, integration, communicative
and social-inclusive design process and long
term strategy. In order to address landscape
infrastructures we can recognize three lenses
for landscape architectonic explorations:
transportation infrastructures, green infrastructures
and water infrastructures. while acknowledged
in the differences amongst the three groups of
landscape infrastructures, it is important to
understand their relationships and to address
them integrally via design research and
research-by-design. Here research inquiry and
design thinking are systematically combined
in a journey of discovery, where the design is
the vehicle to draw up hypotheses of possible
spatial futures. These Inquiries into landscape
infrastructures should reconcile our desire for
economic growth with our hopes for a more
sustainable and ecologically balanced future
and test their local and regional consequences.
Today Infrastructure projects have a key role
in global policy. This fact is recognized and
leads to large-scale economical commitment
of national, international, european and Global
collaborations. we believe that the european
landscape with its tradition and potential
deserves our best efforts in design. In a
time of reconsideration and relection of the
european integration – fostered by inancial
issues – it is astonishing how large and
uncontroversial projects ‘go through’ without
much questioning. To take a critical position
with our studio as a whole is no mere academic
exercise but a true research contribution. New
disciplinary developments need to be made
to address emerging questions in treating
infrastructure as landscape in our living
environment. Design tools to be developed
within this studio will let us approach
landscape as infrastructure in a discourse
that is highly relevant to our time. we are
conident that the lowscapes studio will train
students to make a difference as designers of
our fast evolving world und to take a unique
and integrating position in this dynamic
professional ield.
ar3la010 Design Studio
TraNSporTaTIoN INfraSTrUcTUreS
TRANSPORTATION
INFRASTRUCTURE
Transportation infrastructures are the technical systems which facilitate different modes
of transportation, energy supply, waste treatment and information dissemination (e.g.
telecommunications). obviously it includes
vehicular, rail, and air systems as well as ports
and waterways. But also energy systems (oil,
gas, nuclear, wind, etc.), their transformation
to produce energy, and their distribution are
important elements (powerlines, pipelines).
when we consider these utilitarian systems as
landscape infrastructures they become entities
of multiple-use and integration where technical, aesthetic and social values blend. Multimodal transportation systems affect the public
space in different degree. Typical operations of
landscape architects could be: planning, allocation and design of roads, rail, harbors, waste
treatment plants, wind power plants, trafic
mitigation measures and recreational facilities
for travelers.
Ruhrgebiet
The vast landscape
picture:
a room with a view
(Houben et al. 2003)
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example THe VIew froM THe roaD
a View from the road was departing as a study dealing with the aesthetics of the american Highways. The authors appleyard, lynch and Meyer used the driver’s perspective in photographs and drawings to further develop design methods for the space-time continuum of the modern city. The above drawings are Space-Motion Diagrams
produced by the road trip around a proposed ‘inner belt’ ring road to Boston. They would be experienced when
travelling in the two opposite directions clockwise (above) and counter clockwise (below).
In their extensive and thoughtful study the authors developed many more original but also easily applicable
drawing techniques. Their research by design strategy marks a paradigm shift in urban planning from the predominantly ‘car driven’ urban planning by technical functionalism to ‘human driven’ urban experience by car. They
where providing the tools that could fulill their wish, that the highways may be remembered not only as technical
achievements but as works of art.
text:
appleyard, D., lynch,
K., and Myer, J. r.
(1964). The View from
the road, cambridge,
Massachusetts: The MIT
press
17
picture left and right:
analysis of a route
(appleyard et al. 1964)
ar3la010 Design Studio
example DeSIGNING THe HIGH lINe
The Highline crosses New York’s Manhattan Island in western neighbourhood chelsea. It is a linear public park
of 2,3 km length (of which 1,6 km are opened by 2011) on an abandoned train track. It has planning and building
history of more then ten years and is currently regarded as one of the most successful public space projects in the
world. It has been designed by James corner (field operations), Diller Scoidio + renfro and piet oudolf. Stan
allen - a former associate to corner’s field operations - called the Highline one of only two projects of ‘landscape
Urbanism’ ever realised (2011). certainly The Highline is not only famous for it’s design and planting. In fact the
implementation into a mayor real estate and luxurious housing transformation project in one of the most exclusive cities of the world has contributed to the Highline’s success. The commercial success exceeded its european
precedent the promenade plantée in paris by far. It is now hard to believe that the process was stared to protect
rare species of plants and insects that had inhabited the elevated steel structure. The regulative framework of
this project is said to be excessively complex. The claim of the Highline being a ‘park in the Sky’ not only displays
its high ambition in design but also opens new questions to the role of commerce and green space in the future
metropolis.
text:
David, J. and Hammond,
r. (2011) High line: The
Inside Story of New
York city’s park in the
Sky. New York, farrar,
Straus and Giroux; field
operations and Diller
Scoidio + renfro (2011)
Designing the High line.
18
Gansevoort Street to 30th
Street. New York, friends
of the Highline
picture:
High line, Gansevoort
plaza
(field operations and
Diller Scoidio + renfro,
2011)
Depth of ield
example MoBIlITY: a rooM wITH a VIew
In their study ‘Holland avenue’ architects Mecanoo declare the 153km Highway ring around the randstad as the
most occupied public space of the Netherlands. The facts and igures of Dutch (auto)-mobility are analysed complemented by means of video camera’s from a car, representing the car drivers view. The three terms road, verge
and ield where introduced to challenge the design of the highway, it’s immediate surroundings and the landscape
behind it. The future of roads was studied form a user’s perspective stating that a rich society is a mobile one. It
was part of the architectural Biennale 2003 on mobility curated by Mecannoo’s principal architect francine Houben. The study used interesting drawing techniques but at some levels misses the depth of analysis we know from
The View form the road. It is most interesting in the political and planning context of the evolving perception of
the randstad and the green heart. later this study - but moreover the road centric approach to governmental planning - was under critique by landscape architect adriaan Geuze of west 8 (2007) who introduced his counter model
of the cow Billboard as a monument to the sensual approach of Dutch painter ruysdael to the Dutch landscape.
text:
Houben, f. et al. (2002)
Holland avenue.
research road atlas/
Design road atlas.
Ministerie van Verkeer
en waterstaat, Den
Haag); Houben, f.,
and calabrese, l.M.
(ed.) (2003) Mobility, a
19
room with a View. Nai
publishers, rotterdam
picture:
Holland avenue: depth
of ield
(Houben et al. 2003)
ar3la010 Design Studio
example craZaNNeS QUarrIeS BY BerNarD laSSUS
The ancient crazannes Quarries from gallo-roman times where discovered unexpectedly during construction of
the ‘autoroute 837’ closed to the french atlantic coast. Their strong ancient forms of carved white rock covered
by sporadic almost tropical vegetation form an impressive sequence of varying spaces and impressions. french
landscape architect Bernard lasssus developed his own artistic landscape design process involving a deeply
relective personal, artistic, ethical and aesthetic approach to create a stunning landscape to passers by and
visitors. Much of lassus’ outstanding effort on this project did go into producing a landscape on site through
close cooperation between the designer, the engineers, the workers and local people. The two minute car passage
should not be a forceful penetration but people should traverse it in order to discover it. while the actual works
mainly consist excavating and clearing it is also a impressive display of lassus’ idea of the ‘Heterodite’, which
aims to organise a space not by introducing object but by mirroring it’s heterogenic particularities. lassus’ landscape is to be interpreted by each visitor as he wishes: simultaneous and/or successive concrete and/or imaginary.
text:
conan, M. (2004)
crazannes Quarries
by Bernard lassus: an
essay analyzing the
creation of a landscape.
Spacemaker press,
washington; lassus, B.
(1998) The landscape
approach. University
20
of pennsylvania press,
philadelphia
picture top and middle:
crazannes Quarries
(Source: conan 2004)
picture bottom;
plan of crazannes
Quarries
(Source: conan 2004)
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ar3la010 Design Studio
GreeN INfraSTrUcTUreS
GREEN
INFRASTRUCTURE
Green infrastructures are the interconnected green space networks that maintain and
develop natural ecosystem values and provide
associated social, economic and aesthetic
beneits to humans. Much of the foundation
draws on the 19th century planning principles
of regional metropolitan park systems (exempliied by eliot and Baxter 1893). Useful for
landscape planning and design is the concept
of land mosaics consisting of green patches,
corridors and matrices based on the island
biogeography theory of Mcarthur and wilson
(1967). Besides the importance of urban green
as organizational structures for metropolitan
areas, providing space for nature development,
leisure/recreation, agriculture and cultural
heritage; food and energy supply are becoming
increasingly important. Typical operations of
landscape architects include: landscape planning and design of (urban) green spaces and
structures (e.g. green networks, metropolitan
parks, urban forests), urban ecology, development of urban agriculture, terrestrial nature development and protecting heritage landscapes
picture:
emerald Necklace
(Zaitzevksy 1982)
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example BoSToN MeTropolITaN parK SYSTeM
The Boston Metropolitan park System as proposed in the The Boston Metropolitan park report of 1893 is a big,
bold plan in a small book. commissioned by the Massachusetts state legislature, and authored Sylvester Baxter
and charles eliot, it offered a new vision of how open space and parks could be a part of the rapidly expanding
metropolitan area. It proposed that the commonwealth of Massachusetts purchase speciic privately-owned
sites for the sole purpose of permanently reserving public open space and parks, a regional approach to land use
planning that was virtually unknown at that time. while the so-called emerald Necklace park system, developed
in large measure through the planning and design of the well-known landscape architect frederick law olmsted
Sr., had recently been developed in the city of Boston, the Baxter-eliot plan represented something new. It dramatically expanded the scale of park planning to an area more than ten miles in radius from downtown Boston.
This plan was likely the irst of its kind in the states and abroad, and certainly the irst implemented. In the 1890s,
zoning did not yet exist and landscape architecture and city planning were just emerging as new ields of inquiry
and practice.
text:
Moga, S.T. (2009) Marginal
lands and Suburban
Nature: open Space
planning and the case
of the 1893 Boston
Metropolitan parks plan.
Journal of planning
History 2009; 8(4) 308–329)
23
picture:
Metropolitan park system
of Boston, USa
(personal archive Nijhuis)
ar3la010 Design Studio
Emscher Landschaftspark 2010 in Gelsenkirchen
example eMScHer laNDScHafTSparK
The emscher region or ruhrgebiet was once a horrible example of the devastating effects of industrial urban
agglomeration. It has became representative for the re-invention of a landscape today. The ruhr area – a region
in Germany in the province of Nordrhein-westfalia between the river rhine, the ruhr and the lippe, covers about
4500 km2 and connects 53 cities and 5,3 million people - has been transformed in an informal ruhr Metropolitan
area though the connecting green spaces around the mostly canalised river emscher. once the heart of cole
mining and one of europe’s biggest centre of heavy industry the area came into rapid decline in the 1980ies. This
economic downfall was turned around trough planning into a model case for all or europe. The consistent strategy
is a combination long-term planning and ultra-short term interventions. It is composed of a long-held development
concept, a project based implementation and a succession of temporary events. The start was made with the Internationale Bauausstellung IBa’99 emscher park that innovated on transformation of brown-ields and industrial
monuments. The IBa was followed by the master plan emscher landscape park 2010 culminating in the european
capital of culture rUHr 2010 and, most recently, the vision of a New emscher Valley 2020.
The logic of ‘town devours landscape’ has been turned around into ‘landscape devours town’. emscher is more
than a park, it is becoming a regional cultural landscape or, as suggested by Henri Bava, a Metapolis – a multipolar
urban construction where the landscape is the all-embraced connector.
text:
Denise piccinini,
excursion Guide ruhr
area, The emscher
landscape park, chair of
landscape architecture
TU Delft excursion
Guide September 2010;
regionalverband ruhr
(2010) Under the open
24
Sky. emscher landscape
park. Basel, etc.:
Birkhäuser architecture.
picture left:
Section of the
masterplan emscher
landschaftspark
(projekt ruhr GmbH 2005)
picture left:
Zollverein park,
a project of the
masterplan emscher
landschaftspark
(projekt ruhr GmbH 2005)
example eeTBaar roTTerDaM
rotterdam seams an improbable place to have agriculture in the city. while the more fertile westland production area is just outside rotterdam, the city itself is more famous for it’s harbour and it’s inhabitant’s hands-on
mentality. But this conlicting situation was a challenge for ‘eetbaar rotterdam’, a group of young designers, to
invest into research on urban farming here: .’eetbaar’ sees danger to liveability for rotterdammers in the lack high
quality green recreational spaces, air pollution and other environmental problems. Urban farming could solve issues also of a economically weak class. In ‘ruimte voor stadslandbouw’ (space for urban farming) paul de Graaf
of eetbaar rotterdam was mapping niches of urban space that were inaccessible, unused or temporarily disposable. He investigated into different types of professional agricultural exploitation like an edible edge of a forest,
intensive farming on small plots, hydroculture under glass on roofs and combined vegetable and ish farming.
potentials of the whole rotterdam area where analyzed on large scale. four cases are: the roof of the Bijenkof,
Marconistrip, Housing in charlois-pleinweg and the centre of ommord. These location speciic designs of food
production make the chances concrete.
text:
paul de Graaf (2011)
lay-out #18 platform
voor recent ontwerpend
onderzoek ruimte voor
stadslandbouw. eetbaar
rotterdam in kaart
25
picture top left:
Schema Urban farming in
rotterdam
(Graaf 2011)
picture top right:
chanceMap of rotterdam
(Graaf 2011)
picture bottom:
Impression Garden on
the top of de Bijenkorf
rotterdam
(Graaf 2011)
ar3la010 Design Studio
7 Seed farm
North Park Phase 1 Site Plan
The design competition-winning site plan prepared by landscape architecture irm Field Operations in 2001.
1 Parking area
2 PV shade structure
3 Arc path
4 Tree nursery
5 Plateau
6 Comfort station
7 Seed farm
8 Bird tower
9 Picnic lawn
10 Overlook deck
8
7
7
6
5
and effective landill closure with state-of-the-art land
4
10
9
3
Park. East and West Parks are still undergoing landill
1
Greenbelt
Native Plant Center. After ive years of
2
and lush greenery, will become a lowering meado
exampleTHe freSH KIllS parK: lIfeScape
In this plan for Staten Island in New York a diverse mix of uses is proposed, but the majority of the park—1,740
acres—is devoted to natural areas, including open water, salt marsh and freshwater wetlands, meadow and woodland. over 40 miles of bikeways, trails and paths open up many of the meadow and woodland
areas for recreation
Greenbelt Native Plant Center. After ive years of
in wild settings and enjoyment of the large-scale open space. The waterways can be used for boating and ishing
and lush greenery, will become a lowering meadow.
as well as habitat, while the wetlands are reserved for wildlife. The master plan recommends
a wide array of sports
and recreation facilities, cultural and educational activities, restaurants, market spaces, waterfront programs,
energy farming and greenhouses, art, architecture, gardens and earthwork features for the 330 acres of the park
Left: A aspirations
rendering
of what
the ield
of
sockets
will look
designated for active programming. The proposed land use approach
consistent with
the
for
fresh
Left: Ais rendering
of what
the
ield
of
sockets
Kills park suggested by participants in public meetings over the past three years
text:
field operations (2006)
fresh Kills park:
lifescape (Staten Island,
New York). Draft Master
plan
26
picture top:
Masterplan fresh Kills
park
(field operations, 2006)
picture bottom left:
Impression of North park
phase 1 Site plan
(field operations, 2006)
picture bottom right:
North park phase 1 Site
plan
(field operations, 2006)
will lo
27
ar3la010 Design Studio
waTer INfraSTrUcTUreS
WATER
INFRASTRUCTURE
water infrastructures consists of what is
planned, designed and constructed to manage
water and riparian zones. Important issues
here are coastal and river management, including structures such as, river modiications,
seawalls and loodgates, as well as the use
of beach nourishment, sand dune stabilization and the protection/development of lood
forests and coastal/estuarine wetlands. Major
lood control systems (dikes, levees, major
pumping stations and loodgates), drainage
systems (storm sewers, ditches), major irrigation systems (fresh water reservoirs, irrigation
canals), as well as sewage collection, and disposal of waste water. Important operations of
landscape architects are: landscape planning
and design of lood defences, river modiication, aquatic nature development, fresh water
supply, water fronts, waste water treatment
plants, etc
picture:
powerflood - a power
plant and recreation
complex in Zeeland
(Shany Barath and
Gary freedman, TU
Delft, Master Thesis
architecture archiprix
2008 (3rd rank) )
28
example TeNNeSSee ValleY aUTHorITY (TVa)
The Tennessee Valley authority was chartered by congress in 1933 with the purpose to improve the navigability
and to provide for the lood control of the Tennessee river in the South western USa. further public services in
this project where the reforestation and the proper use of marginal land in the Tennessee valley; The agricultural
and industrial development of Said Valley; and a the national defense interest of Government properties at and
near Muscle Shoals, alabama. The TVa region, deined as the watershed of the Tennessee river and its tributaries,
encompasses all of Tennessee and parts of six other states: Virginia, North carolina, Georgia Mississippi, and
Kentucky. as part of the new deal stimulation bills the TVa project integrally addressed various hydrologically
linked issues of concern with unprecedented comprehensiveness. TVa remains one of the biggest examples of
regionally integrated resource management in history.
text:
Macy, c. et al. (2007) The
Tennessee Valley authority: Design and persuasion. New York: princeton
University press
29
picture:
proile of Tennessee &
clinch rivers showing
existing and propodes
dams.
(Tennessee Valley authority, 1939)
ar3la010 Design Studio
example SoaK: MUMBaI IN aN eSTUarY
Until recently Mumbai the most populated and capital city of India, was accustomed to being soaked by the
monsoon. The rains of July 26, 2005, however did not soak the city; they looded it. Hundreds died and much
property was lost as parts of Mumbai went under many feet of water. Those rains were unusual. The average for
the whole season fell in a day – 944 mm. However, it takes much less to lood Mumbai today. Three years on, 100
mm of rain or less is enough to cause a ‘lood’ and suggest that Mumbai is shifting from welcoming or abhorring
a soak by the monsoon to fearing and ighting being looded by it. an estuary demands gradients not walls, luid
occupancies not deined land uses, negotiated moments not hard edges. In short, it demands the accommodation
of the sea not a war against it which continues to be fought by engineers and administrators as they carry sea
walls inland in a bid to both, channel monsoon runoff and keep the sea out. Soak is an appreciation of an aqueous terrain. It encourages designs that hold monsoon waters rather than channel them out to sea; that work with
the gradient of an estuary; that accommodate uncertainty through resilience, not overcome it with prediction. It
moves Mumbai out of the language of lood and the widely accepted trajectory of war with the sea and monsoon
that this language perpetuates. It recovers the world of soak. Soak, in brief, is about making peace with the sea;
about designing with the monsoon in an estuary
text:
Mathur, a. and Dacuntha,
D. (2009) Soak: Mumbai in
an estuary. rupa co.
30
picture left:
Mapping from Soak:
Mumbai in an estuary
(Mathur, a. and
Dacuntha, D. (2009))
picture left:
worlifort perspective
layer 1&2
(Mathur, a. and
Dacuntha, D. (2009))
example plaN ooIeVaar (plaN STorK)
The ooievaar plan was the winning plan at the eo wijers competition in 1986. The name ‘ooievaar’ (Dutch for
‘Stork’) summarises the essentials of the plan. The ooievaar plan proposed a new structure and water management method for the ‘grote rivieren’ the river system that crosses the Netherlands from east to west. This
area was more known as a cultural geographical border to the Dutch than for it’s visual expression and land use
potential. In the plan the concentration of natural development in the river loodplain of rhine and Meuse leads
to the formation of a coherent framework of such a size that prospects of self-regulating natural processes arise,
and exceptional forms of recreation become possible. The basin areas are landscaped for agrarian use, so that
the existing farms can continue operation in the future. flexibility is built in by the dimensions and by a double
water system of high and low level. This enables farmers to manage the groundwater level of each plot to suit its
speciic use. landscape features in the dyke-protected areas, which currently suffer from a falling water table,
are linked to the high water system so that a framework is formed on a smaller scale too. The Integral ooievaar
plan was also the irst experiment of the author’s using a method they called the ‘casco’. ‘casco’ is a Dutch word
to describe structure delivered at raw, like the shell of a building or the hull of a ship, which sets the general shape
and guides future detailed development. The ideas exposed by this plan where the basis for the room for the river
(ruimte voor de rivier) projects in the Netherlands.
text:
Bruin, D. de, D. Hamhuis,
l. van Nieuwenhuijze, w.
overmars, D. Sijmons &
f. Vera (1987) ooievaar.
De toekomst van het
rivierengebied. Stichting
Gelderse Milieufederatie,
arnhem
31
picture:
plan ooiveaar
(De Bruin et al. 1987)
ar3la010 Design Studio
example wHere BeaVerS aND SealS MeeT
The Haringvliet - Hollandsch Diep - Biesbosch area stretches across the complete estuary of the ‘large rivers’. In
this aerea the inluences of sea and river combine. Major lood control measures after the 1953 lood lead to large
shifts in the exceptional sweet water tidal landscape. along the area sweet-water residents like beavers in the
Biesbosch could potentially meet the salt-water inhabitant seals at the North Sea. Bosch Slabbers developed a
design research project ‘The Great Delta Zoom’ project for the International architecture Biennale rotterdam
2012. They asked how a ‘Business as Usual’ strategy of prolonging the current development policy of the region
while addressing lood risk issues could make the area attractive and adaptive to create value for landscape,
nature and economy. The developed future scenarios for Super Dikes integrate technical, natural and recreational
programmes of great variety according to the very different areas around it. each dike is not only part of a large
plan but reacts and enhances landscape characteristics of the speciic areas like dunes, salt marsh, silted coast,
mud lat or sweet or salt water tidal forest. Multiple use and integration into nature preservation could make the
necessary dike reinforcements less destructive for the landscape. New chances are offered for inhabitants and
nature to participate in developing this large transformation programme even in times of recession. The plan
shows new ways in governance for water infrastructure. Instead of monotonous centralistic mega structures the
authors propose a functional continuum of varying landscape scenarios that leave space for local and private initiative. The designs are stimulating individual occupation of the space created by infrastructure as alternative to
the creation of large abandoned infrastructural wasteland.
text:
Bosch and Slabbers
(2012) where beavers
and seals meet, in:
Delta programme
(eds.) rhine-Meuse
Delta: opportunities for
the current lood risk
management strategy in
2100 rotterdam
32
picture top, middle and
bottom:
Impressions of the design
where beavers and seals
meet
(Bosch and Slabbers,
2012)
33
rHINe-DaNUBe corrIDor
SPATIAL
FRAMEWORK
RHINE-DANUBE CORRIDOR
34
The studio is framed around the rhineDanube corridor, integrating and deining
europe between the North Sea and the
Black Sea. The Danube river Basin collects
water from territories of nineteen countries
and it forms the international boundary of
eight of these. The rhine Basin connects
nine countries. The rhine is also the
primary artery of one of the most important
economic regions (about 1750 billion US$
GDp) of europe and is characterized by large
crowded urban areas, which harbors about
58 million inhabitants. Since 1992 the rhine
and Danube are hydrologically connected
via the rhine-Main-Danube canal thereby
creating a Trans-european waterway offering
spatial, ecological, economic and social
opportunities, as well as threats. along the
rhine-Danube various projects have been
selected based on their strategic and integral
nature and potentiality to become a landscape
architecture design-based case study. The
waterway upstream and downstream dynamics
connect the projects and will provide a common
platform for dialogue and exchange while also
revealing the distinctions and particularities
across the trans-european waterway.
The symbolic act of connecting the two
rivers gives the project its undeniable appeal,
and makes europe look like a geographic
inevitability in times of political and economic
unrest. In many ways, the symbolism of the
blue axis out performs its economic and
ecologic signiicance. The canal has 16 locks
that overcome a height difference of 175
meters and many parts of the Danube simply
are unsuitable for year-round navigation,
a problem that is increasing with climate
change. In order to make the evocative blue
line through europe a productive transport
artery, massive river rectiications, weirs, new
locks, intermodal harbours, and other dramatic
landscape transformations will be needed. as
part of european Trans european Networks
(the eU territorial scheme for infrastructural
development; TeN, 2008) the rhine-Danube
is a priority axis at national, regional, and
european level. political will and inancial
means have been mobilized for development of
the waterway and solve current bottlenecks.
But what will this means for the ininitely
diverse riparian ecology of europe’s two most
famous rivers? will they be transformed into
homogenous conduits for trade?
The infrastructures of the last century were
characterized by a paradigm that sought to
overcome the unpredictable dynamism of
nature in order to facilitate more static and
uniformly deined human needs. However,
over the last decades this conquest of nature
has been under revision due to increased
knowledge and awareness about the codependencies between our social and economic
desires and the ecological processes. The
landscape architecture design challenge along
the rhine-Danube is found at the intersection
of these debates about spatial quality,
economic growth, green networks, habitat,
biodiversity, urban development, looding,
urban water management, urban agriculture,
drainage/irrigation, energy production, and a
lot more pressing issues of high socio-political
signiicance.
of european Infrastructure (european
commission, 2011). The urgency for landscape
design in the next few years is to formulate a
position and design strategies that rethink the
infrastructural paradigm for the 21st century
now, to make these huge investments a truly
valuable contribution to our future living
environment.
landscape architectural design practices
can fulil several roles in developing these
infrastructures in more innovative ways. The
studio invites students to develop thesis that
critically engage in this pressing contemporary
challenge at the scale of the continent. Until
2020 1 trillion euros (1.000.000.000.000 eUr)
has been budgeted for the development
pictures on the next pages:
Urban Tissue, Natura
2000, water, Soil and
Transport Networks
(Steffen Nijhuis, 2012)
picture:
The Danube Bend is a
curve of the Danube in
Hungary, near the city of
Visegrád
(12 Bryson, Bill. MainDanube canal--linking
europe’s waterways,.
31 vols. Vol. 2, National
Geographic august 1992.)
35
ar3la010 Design Studio
36
37
UrBaN TISSUe
NaTUra 2000
38
SoIl
waTer
39
TraNSporT NeTworKS
5 MeTropolITaN areaS, 10 proJecTS
5
METROPOLITAN
AREAS,
10
PROJECTS
while each of the following projects along
the rhine-Danube have their own geographic,
social, economic, and ecologic particularities
they are all connected along the same
hydrologic system. a hydrologic system that
is a hybrid between man made structures
(waterway infrastructures) and geographic
features (the river’s hydromorphology) and
epitomizes the struggle of the 21st century: to
realign the spatial development of our global
society in better harmony with ecological
and social systems. additionally, all of
the following infrastructural projects are
developed at the intersection of european,
national, municipal and private interests.
Because all projects require investments from
stakeholders at all of these public and private
levels design proposals need to operate within
an intricate understanding of these various
scales.
roTTerDaM (NeTHerlaNDS)
1. Highway a15 Maasvlakte-Vaanplein
2. Urban agriculture South wing
3. ecoparc Biesbosch-Voordelta
rUHrGeBIeD (GerMaNY)
4. Green hub Highway e34-Duisburg Hafen
5. Urban open spaces ruhr-area
VIeNNa - BraTISlaVa (aUSTrIa/
SloVaKIa)
6. Bratislava river bypass
SerBIa
7. Hydroscape NoviSad
8. Belgrade waterfront park
BUcHareST (roMaNIa)
9. Bucharest-Danube canal
10. river-modiication Danube
alTerNaTIVe locaTIoN IN rHINeDaNUBe corrIDor
11. Self deined project
40
41
42
HIGHwaY a15 MaaSVlaKTe-VaaNpleIN
The a15 is a transportation axis that connects the rotterdam harbour with the european Hinterland. Between
Maasvlakte at the North Sea coast and Vaanplein the a15 connects to the larger terminals in the harbour and the
industrial and logistical complexes that are associated with it here across 45km. Through the dominant position
of rotterdam harbour and road based transportation a huge share of the fast moving consumer goods and industrial supplies of europe passes this road. The scale jump into global economy for rotterdam harbour leads
to constant transformation of this estuarial landscape. with the current building of Maasvlake 2 the seaside tip
of the Highway is extended across Maasvlakte 1 until 2015. The transportation capacity will be extended to ight
frequent trafic jams in the 45km between rotterdam and the North Sea. In the midst of all the industries a15 has
also become a route to bring inhabitants of rotterdam to their various recreational activities that take place along
the southern coast and even on the quite unnatural Maasvlakte. The local effects of these original colonisations
are oftentimes surprising. Their improvisation contrast the strong global interdependencies of the low of goods
and impressive infrastructure and industry of national and european economic importance. what are the spatial
chances in the interconnection of the further developing economic and recreational networks through the a15?
1
picture top left:
Traject a15 MaasvlakteVaanplein
(Quist, wintermans
architecten BV)
43
picture top right:
picture of the second
Maasvlakte
(Thijs Jauslin, 2012)
picture bottom:
Satellite picture
Maasvlakte-Vaanplein
(Google Maps)
ar3la010 Design Studio
UrBaN aGrIcUlTUre SoUTH wING
The South wing refers to the southern part of the randstad combining larger cities Den Haag, rotterdam and the
smaller cities of the region up to Dordrecht. It is a planning Vehicle to integrate these cities into a meaningful global metropolitan area. If looking at the area as a Green Infrastructure it is of european importance for food production in the westland and in the eastern provinces of ‘eastland’ historic ‘slow food’ agricultural landscape forms
a strong contrast with ‘fast food’ hors-sol production in glasshouses and giant ‘meat factories’ of cattle farms.
New visions to turn the agricultural landscape into Metropolitan parks for it’s 3,2 million inhabitants do not seam
to match either speed of food production low. other contrasting elements in the South wing are transportation
lows to the impressive world port, and a water dominated landscape. The relationship to the rivers and canals
formed the basis of all historic city development in South Holland. a dominant water management and safety
infrastructure of large scale ensures safety from coastal and luvial lood risks. what project could lead to targets
of cleaner economy, better accessibly, living comfort and public green spaces? can eficient high-rise farming or
extensive localised neighbourhood food production help to reach these targets?
2
picture top:
Towards New capital
project
(Ian Douglas-Jones’s,
also featured in london
Yields)
44
picture bottom:
Satellite picture South
wing randstad
(Google Maps)
ecoparK VoorDelTa-BIeSBoScH
The Haringvliet-Hollandsch Diep – Biesbosch area encompasses the complete estuary from Voordelta to Biesbosch. In this area the inluence of the sea and the rivers combines, fresh water meets salt water in an (semi-)
inter-tidal zone. a reconsideration of the current lood risk management strategy offers opportunities for spatial
development. The area from Voordelta to Biesbosch can become a unique continuous ecopark, a green gateway
to rotterdam. In this perspective attractive and interwoven routes connect the city with an inter-tidal zone, allowing people to experience the sequence from fresh water through brackish to salt water. The dynamics of the
water creates an increasing environment of mud lats and brackish marshes with space for new types of housing,
water safety and ecological qualities. The Biesbosch can become more tidal with space for more tidal forests.
But how can we create such an ecopark build on natural processes using dams, dikes and waterworks? and what
landscape architectonic interventions are needed to facilitate the dynamics of water, but in same time creating an
interesting and safe place to live, work and stay in?
3
picture top:
ecopark waalwijk
(www.polderpv.nl/
ecopark_waalwijk.htm)
45
picture bottom:
Satellite picture
Haringvliet & Hollandsch
Diep
(Google Maps)
ar3la010 Design Studio
GreeN HUB HIGHwaY e34-DUISBUrG HafeN
The e 34 (German a 40) crosses the rhine at Duisburg Harbour at the eastern edge of giant Metropolitan area
ruhrgebiet (ruhr-area). This Intermodal trafic node used to be one of the hotspots of German industrial export
and has undergone massive transformations with the whole region. The a 40 is a former Bundesstrasse 1 and cuts
right through the centre of essen and along many impressive mining and heavy industry sites. It is a main connector up to Dortmund at the western end of the ruhr-area. every morning and evening trafic jams block 120 000
car-drivers in this most used piece of highway. In the Shadow of this Highway a peculiar urban space was generated inside a heavily transformed industrial landscape, than can only be explored by stepping out of the car. During
european capital ruhr 2010 the project ‘Die Schönheit der Grossen Strasse’ (The Beauty of the Big road) explored the urbanity of this infrastructure and explored the aesthetically and social space with artistic intervention. In
another project ‘Stilleben’ (Still live) Millions of people came walking and biking on the street to see a 60km long
table during a closure of trafic for the ruhr 2010 festivities. Both the art project and the popular happening illustrate, how this most occupied common living space is much more than a trafic infrastructure to the ive Million
inhabitants of the ruhr-area. what landscape design projects could sustainable connect the often times dysfunctional transportation with valuable secondary uses? could such project incorporate a more positive identiication
of the region with it’s crucial infrastructure? can permanent development strategies capture the momentum that
the 2010 short time projects revealed?
4
picture top left:
european capital of
culture rUHr 2010
46
picture top right:
ruhr
TraNS stilllebenstau
picture bottom:
Satellite picture e34
Duisburg Hafen
(Google Maps)
UrBaN opeN SpaceS rUHr-area
open spaces in contemporary urban landscapes like the ruhr-area are taking on a multifunctional character
where functions like leisure and tourism, conservation of nature and landscape, and cultural heritage start to predominate. It is becoming a public space. This transformation calls for development-based approaches and requires
management to, on the one hand, continue to meet present-day requirements and, on the other, to safeguard the
spatial quality of the surroundings. at the same time, a robust spatial structure has to be developed where ecological and other landscape-related values are protected and maintained. regional project envelopes as exempliied
by the emscher landscape park or rhein-Main regional park serve as a practical, goal-oriented incentive for
urban landscape development and protection with key roles for landscape architects and urban planners. Their
involvement in spatial design-driven research on the regional scale ensures that metropolitan areas are developed in a responsible fashion. But how can we incorporate urban and suburban factors in the planning process and
safeguard the difference between urban and rural areas and regard it as an opportunity to develop and protect the
qualities of metropolitan areas? what are suitable strategies for spatial development in terms of collaboration,
integration, qualiication of the landscape, regional action and networks?
5
picture top:
landschaftspark
Duisburg
(Gert-Jan Hospers &
peter Timmerman)
47
picture bottom:
Satellite picture ruhrarea
(Google Maps)
ar3la010 Design Studio
BraTISlaVa rIVer BYpaSS
at the most Southern tip of Slovakia, Bratislava is sandwiched in between the borders of austria and Hungary.
Historically Bratislava marks the western border of the iron curtain and is therefore still the frontier of a complex reconciliation process between long-separated people and cultures of east and west europe. Now, with all
bordering countries being part of the eU, metropolitan development along the Danube river basin is taking new
meaning. Bratislava was founded on the high northern embankment of the Danube. Intense river rectiications of
the old meander-belt, which were constructed under communist rule, spurred urban sprawl in the southern loodplains of the Danube. Due to increased precipitation and more irregular lows on the Danube the southern area of
Bratislava is becoming increasingly vulnerable to looding. Two current infrastructural ambitions, to create a river
bypass and the construction of a lock, provide the preconditions to develop a larger landscape infrastructural
strategy for the city. flood mitigation, urban sprawl, brownield mediation, recreation and navigation are a some
of the ‘lows’ that a spatial plan for South Bratislava should comprehensively address. Herein, an understanding
of hydrologic engineering, overlapping ecological systems, and the metropolitan/regional development in between
Vienna, Bratislava, and Budapest can inspire a new type of infrastructural approach.
6
picture top:
Bratislava Danube
Bypass
(Staronove Dunasjke
ramena, Bratislava)
48
picture bottom:
Satellite picture
Bratislava
(Google Maps)
NoVISaD HYDropolIS
NoviSad is the second biggest city in Serbia. It is the capital of the autonomous province of Vojvodina and one of
the last sites of violent conlict in europe. In 1999 misguided NaTo bombes destroyed all the bridges over the Danube and several vital industrial facilities. Nato’s blunder exposed the strategic signiicance of Serbian thoroughfare for cities up and downstream of Novi Sad. The bombings also set NoviSad’s development back decades
from which it is still recovering. a large part of the challenges NoviSad faces are related to the hydrology of the
Danube including issues such as; lood-protection, the development of recreational spaces, a new intermodal port,
a water treatment facility, and a bridge. In the 2030 master-plan, the development of several of these hydrologic
programs have been proposed in what are currently agriculture ields, industrial sites, and wetlands. while all projects are linked by water they are currently planned as isolated blocks. The current approach misses the chance
to exploit the co-dependencies, feedback loops, and hybrid possibilities that exist in between the sites existent
systems. The site‘s programmatic challenge therefore paves the way for a spatial design proposal where infrastructure and landscape can take leading role in structuring urban development in and around NoviSad and the
Danube. The sociopolitical setting, which includes the eU-ascension of Serbia, post-socialist political restructuring, and regional collaboration along the Danube basin, must be well understood in order to strategically propose
a meaningful project. Infrastructural proposals therefore will have to develop a conscious position in relation to
these processes at various scales.
7
picture top:
Bridge near NoviSad
(christopher de Vries)
49
picture bottom:
Satellite picture Novisad
(Google Maps)
ar3la010 Design Studio
BelGraDe waTerfroNT parK
after the war in Yugoslavia the general political infrastructure of Serbia dissolved. as a result urban development
in Serbia became haphazard due to widespread migration and lack of planning implementation. what was left of a
formal government sold off land cheaply and illegal occupation around the city ran strife.
The old harbor of Belgrade was part of this dubious wholesale in which public property became privately owned.
The remaining harbor infrastructure is now outdated and has been zoned as a brownield for redevelopment a
new intermodal harbor has also been proposed on the other side of the river in an existing wetland.. The brownield reclamation and the development of the new harbor together form a complex challenge where hard infrastructure, the cities recreational infrastructure, and the Danube’s hydrological infrastructure have to be integrally
dealt with. The scope of the project will reveal the evolution of production in europe from a post-fordist system
to a globally orchestrated logistics network. agenda’s including brownield reclamation, wetland rehabilitation,
lood-protection, real estate development and logistical infrastructure will somehow have to ind resolution on
Belgrade’a waterfront. The unlikely convergence of programs in the Belgrade project expose the complexity
caused by conlicting interest that surround river development. as with the project in NoviSad, an understanding
of the complex sociopolitical developments that are taking place is necessary to develop a viable strategy.
8
picture top left:
areal picture of Belgrado
waterfront
(luka_Beograd)
50
picture top right:
city on water
(Daniel liebeskind, Jan
Gehl, leka Beograd)
picture bottom:
Satellite picture Belgrade
(Google Maps)
BUcHareST-DaNUBe caNal
Bucharest is the capital of romania and unlike most large cities near the rhine and Danube is found at an unconventionally large distance from the main river along the non-navigable tributary Dambovita.
plans to connect Bucharest to the Danube by means of a canal have existed since 1880, but construction only
started in 1986 under romania’s last communist leader Nicolae ceaucescu. after ceaucescu’s execution in 1989
construction ceased. Today the remnants of a gigantic infrastructural project lie deteriorating in the periphery
of Bucharest. The channel and its infrastructural ruins provide a provocative terrain vague, characterized by a
surreal juxtaposition of severe contamination, recreational use, concrete heroism and remnants of a pastoral almost sublime - landscape. plans to inish the canal have never ceased, but recently european ambitions to make
the Danube more navigable to the east of Vienna have spurred ideas to make use of this european momentum to
inish the canal as well. finishing the 87 km long canal will have massive impact on the landscape, but the fulilment of the uninished plan from the 1980’s is still a political taboo. a canal proposal must include proposals for
irrigation systems, recreational areas for the metropolis, lood buffers, and armatures for urban growth of the
capital. The arges challenge allows for the reinvention of the canal typology for the 21st century.
9
picture top:
lacul de acumulare
(Mihailesti, 2008)
51
picture bottom:
Satellite picture
Bucharest
(Google Maps)
ar3la010 Design Studio
rIVer-MoDIfIcaTIoN DaNUBe
romania often boasts being the most important state on the Danube because it has the largest border with the
river of all riparian states. The romanian stretch of the Danube, however, is also one of the most unaltered areas
along the stream and therefore has been identiied as one of the biggest bottlenecks for european trade along the
waterway (TeN-T). Besides being the site of various protected Natura 2000 locations (eea), the river is also the
border with Bulgaria. remarkably, the 550km stretch of the Danube between romania and Bulgaria has only one
bridged crossing (a second is under construction). This lack of connection is uncommon among neighbouring eU
states and the river development framework could give the border new meaning. The planned river modiications
are thus situated within the delicate political context of two states that only after 1989 have become liberated of
the large ruling powers that instrumentalized the Danube border in Imperial power Games throughout the Modern
age. New projects also need to deal with the unpopular legacy of communist state engineering that is voiced
by an increasingly powerful environmental lobby that would prefer the rivers unaltered. The question is whether
innovative strategies for river development can overcome the past and design for the harmonious co-existence of
economic, social, and ecological “uses” of the river. Several harbors along this route provide interesting departure
points for investigation, but more than a point intervention this stretch of the Danube requires a more methodological approach similar to the Dutch “room for the river” strategy. landscape Infrastructural concepts that are
relevant across the whole stretch have to be develop at high resolution while remaining relevant along the 550km
stretch. cross-Sections that integrate settlements, agricultural production, logistical infrastructure, and lood
mitigation will intrinsically deal with the relation and metropolitan development between Bulgaria and romania.
10
picture top:
The Danube-Drava
conluence between
Serbia and croatia
(Mario romulic)
52
picture bottom:
Satellite picture romania
(Google Maps)
Self DefINeD proJecT
within the described framework of european rhine-Danube corridor there is plenty of room to deine your own
project (in the Netherlands or abroad) on different scale levels (from transnational to local), and put your own desired accent. each student can formulate his own project speciic to an area as long as it relects one of the three
thematic lenses (T, G or w) and connects geographically to the rhine-Danube waterway.
11
picture:
Veldwerk by artist Yeb
wiersma, 2011
(Mapping flevoland #1,
2012)
53
ar3la010 Design Studio
THeoreTIcal BacKGroUNDS
allen, s. (1999) ‘Infrastructural urbanism’. In:
points + lines. Diagrams and projects for the
city. New York, princeton architectural press.
pp 46–59
appleyard, d., Lynch, K., and Myer, J. r. (1964).
The View from the road, cambridge,
Massachusetts: The MIT press.
RECOMMENDED
LITERATURE
Bélanger, p. (2009) landscape as Infrastructure.
landscape Journal 28(1): 79-95. See also:
idem. (2011) ‘redeining Infrastructure’. In:
Mostafavi, M. and Doherty, G. (eds.) ecological
Urbanism. Baden, Switzerland: lars Müller
publishers. pp. 332-349
Benedict, M.a. and McMahon, e.t. (2006) Green
Infrastructure: linking landscapes and
communities. Island press
Baxter, s. and eliot, c. (1893). Boston
Metropolitan park report. report of the Board
of Metropolitan park commissioners. January,
1893. House, no. 150., Boston.
Bruin, d. de, et al. (1987) ooievaar. De toekomst
van het rivierengebied. Stichting Gelderse
Milieufederatie (with english summary)
czerniak, J., and Hargreaves, G. (eds.) (2007) large
parks. New York: princeton architectural
press.
corboz, a. (1983). The land as palimpsest. in:
Diogenes 31(No. 121).
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Urbanism. addressing The In-Between. Dom
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Konijnendijk, c., nilsson, K., randrup, t.B. and
schipperijn, J. (eds.) (2005) Urban forests and
Trees. a reference Book. Springer Verlag.
54
available for download (TU campus)
http://www.springerlink.com/content/978-3-54027684-5#section=536454&page=1
Marzluff, J., shulenberger, e. et al. (2008) Urban
ecology: an International perspective on the
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International 56: 97-127
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Doubleday
niemela, J. et al. (eds.) (2011) Urban ecology.
patterns, processes, and applications. oxford
University press
Oswalt, f., and Baccini, p. (2003). Netzstadt.
Designing the urban, Basel, etc.: Birkhäuser.
rowe, c. (1992) Making a Middle landscape.
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sandstrom, u.G. (2008) Biodiversity and Green
Infrastructure in Urban landscapes: The
Importance of Urban Green Spaces. VDM
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sieverts, t. (2003) cities without cities: an
interpretation of the Zwischenstadt. london:
routledge
spiro n., schodek, d., Georgoulias, a. and ramos,
s. J. (2012) Infrastructure, Sustainability and
Design. london: routledge.
steenbergen, c.M. et al. (2011) Metropolitan
landscape architecture. Urban parks and
landscapes. Bussum, THoTH.
tress, G., tress, B., Harms, B., smeets, p., and
Valk, a. v. d. (2004) planning Metropolitan
landscapes. concepts, Demands, approaches.
wageningen: alterra (DelTa series 4).
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landscape. landscape Journal 27(2): 219-246
Waldheim, c. (ed.) (2006) The landscape
Urbanism reader. New York: princeton
55
ar3la010 Design Studio
proJecT INSpIraTIoN
allen, s. and M. McQude (2011) landform
Building: achitecture’s New Terrain. New York/
Baden: lars Müller publishers & princeton
Universitiy School of architecture.
Berger, a. (2006) Drosscape: wasting land
in Urban america. New York: princeton
architectural press.
Berger, a. (2002) reclaiming the american west,
New York: princeton architectural press.
Busquets, J. (ed.) (2007) cities X lines:
approaches to city and open Territory Design.
actar D / Nicolodi editore
conan, M. (2006) crazannes Quarries by Bernard
lassus. Spacemaker press
david, J and Hammond , r. (2011) High line: The
Inside Story of New York city’s park in the
Sky. New York: farrar, Straus and Giroux
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landscape to city. agence Ter. Basel, etc.:
Birkhäuser architecture.
Haven and london, Yale University press.
Mathur, a. and dacuntha, d. (2009) Soak: Mumbai
in an estuary. rupa co
Mostafavi, M. and najle, c. (eds.) (2003) landscape
Urbanism. a Manual for the Machinic
landscape. london, architectural association
Mostafavi, M. and doherty, G. (eds.) (2009)
ecological Urbanism. Baden, Switzerland: lars
Müller publishers
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Birkhäuser architecture.
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of contemporary Infrastructure. rotterdam:
Nai publishers.
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case Studies by Swa. Basel, etc.: Birkhäuser
architecture.
nordenson, G., seavitt, c. and Yarinsky, a. (2010)
on the water: palisade Bay. The Museum of
Modern art, New York
West8 (2007) Mosaics. ludion
field Operations and diller scoidio + renfro (2011)
Designing the High line. Gansevoort Street to
30th Street. New York, friends of the Highline
Girot, c., and Wolf, s. (2010) Blicklandschaften.
landschaft in Bewegung. Zurich,gta Verlag:
Grub, H., and Lejeune, p. (1995). Grün zwischen
Städten. emscher landschaftspark, Nordrheinwestfalen; GrünGürtel frankfurt, regionalpark
rheinMain; Grüne Nachbarschaft, Badenwürttemberg. München/New York: prestel
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Houben, f., and calabrese, L.M. (ed.) (2003)
Mobility, a room with a View. Nai publishers,
rotterdam.
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strategies for infrastructural opportunism,
New York, princeton architectural press.
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Designing Urban embankments. Basel, etc.:
Birkhäuser architecture.
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loods. Designing a shifting landscape. New
56
SpaTIal fraMeworK
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Materializing europe: Transnational
Infrastructures and the project of europe.
palgrave
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(1815-2000). University of washington press
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connection and Urban competition” In: Hard,
M. and Misa, T. J. (eds.) Urban machinery :
inside modern european cities. cambridge,
Mass.: The MIT press.
Blackbourn, d. (2006) The conquest of nature:
water, landscape, and the making of modern
Germany, New York, Norton.
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compatible Development of Urban.
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shultz-Wulwer-Leidig (1995) ecological Master
plan for the rhine catchment. In: Harper, D.M.
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restrained river. Diemen: Veen Magazines.
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(eds.) (2008) rivers of europe. academic press
(chapters 3 and 6)
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europe.
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Download.cfm
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rehabilitation of the river landscape in the
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ar3la010 Design Studio
OVERVIEW AND
STRUCTURE OF
THE STUDIO
The studio strongly relies on the force of
common experimental exploration of the
relevant subject landscape as infrastructure
in a concentrated academic environment. It
is both extremely large and very small; on
one hand it is highly interrelated to important
current developments within all europe – that
are model to global solutions in need. and
on the other a small and intensely monitored
group of students with teachers with relevant
scientiic and practical knowledge. The goal
is to not only enable students to make a
good project but that their projects may be
signiicant statements positioning individual
students and the whole group in a large
professional ield. as a group we want to keep
an open and productive discussion and – as in
all good research – ask the right questions to
which we do not know all the answers yet. we
commonly deine what TU Delft landscape
architecture will be worth in both the scientiic
a professional world. flowscapes projects
will position Delft in the world of landscape
architecture at the interface of Urbanism,
architecture, civil engineering, environmental
and Spatial planning and the projects will be
opening the students eyes on one of europe’s
most relevant academic job markets. every
single student’s own initiative and critique
to our experiment are essential to make this
journey across our continent succeed.
The studio is a refereed design studio. Besides
the formal evaluation moments (in Dutch:
peilingen), the studio work will be reviewed
by two or three external experts in the ield.
During two sessions before evaluation 2 (p2)
and evaluation 4 (p4) students receive critical
feedback on their projects.
please check the detailed schedule for the
exact date, time and location. Updates will be
provided though blackboard and/or email.
58
MSC 4
MSC 3
Design
Studio
Research
Methodology
Design with
Natural Processes
Space and Society
P1
P2
P3
Refereed
Mid-Term
Refereed
Mid-Term
59
P4
ar3la010 Design Studio
P5
STUDIo worK
Tuesday afternoon and Thursday morning studio work with collective and individual sessions with the tutor team and guest tutors. In the
irst week there will be full time introductory
program with lectures, group work and presentations. after p1 there will be an exchange program of one week with international students.
This is an ideal opportunity to exchange views,
develop innovative ideas and stimulate critical
thinking on the topic by design workshops,
brainstorming, design charettes, rapid iterative
testing/evaluation, etc.
Self STUDY
Besides group work self study is an important
element of the studio. Self study is a form of
study in which one is to a large extent responsible for one’s own instruction. Throughout the
semester student will spend a great deal of
their time with thinking, drawing, reading and
writing by themselves. Self discipline, organization, working conditions and planning are
important issues in this respect and the students own responsibility. please check chapter
seven for the expected products and tailor the
time planning towards an effective and eficient work low.
The tutors will facilitate and support the work
of the students as much as possible. feel free
to contact them for (speciic) help and/or information. we also encourage students to interact
with other students providing for feedback,
brainstorming and a nice atmosphere for research and design.
please visit the student portal for more (general) information on academic counseling, etc.
(http://studenten.tudelft.nl/en/nl/)
preSeNTaTIoNS
as scheduled the students have to present
their research and design by means of spoken,
visual and written presentations on a regular
basis. There are three types of presentations
scheduled:
- work in progress presentations on a regular
basis (three-weekly)
- refereed presentations
- evaluation 1 (p1), evaluation 2 (p2),
evaluation 3 (p3), evaluation 4 (p4), and
evaluation 5 (p5) according to the schedule.
60
an overview of expected products can be found
in chapter 7.
More information about the formal graduation
requirements can be found in the TU Delft Graduation Manual
Master architecture, Urbanism & Building Sciences. academic year 2012-2013.
colloQUIa
Throughout the semester there are three thematic colloquia with two or three lectures and
discussion.
- Transportation Infrastructure, Thursday 11
october 2012
- Green Infrastructure, Thursday 15
November 2012
- water Infrastructure, Thursday 13
December 2012
During this sessions experts from a variety of
related disciplines will address the theme from
a particular point of view.
fIelD worK
In research and design ield work is essential
for understanding the site, its context and its
design brief. So we encourage students to visit
their project area as soon as possible and as
oft as needed. week ive will be an excellent
opportunity to visit the project area for the irst
time to sketch, take notes and pictures. Depending on the project we can arrange also some
interesting local contacts who can provide you
with data and information. There are also some
possibilities for external funding of your ieldtrip. please contact the studio coordinator for
more information on the possibilities.
coMpleMeNTarY coUrSeS
for landscape architecture-students the studio is complemented with the related courses:
research methodology in landscape architecture (ar3la020; 5 ecTS), Design with natural
processes (ar3la030; 5 ecTS) and Space and
Society (ar3la040; 5 ecTS). These courses
provide for input and reinement in terms of
theory, methods, techniques and practical
clues and directions. The expected output of
the courses research methodology and Design
with natural processes are mutatis mutandis
input for the integral report. See the course
descriptions for detailed information.
Urbanism-students follow complementary
courses offered by Urbanism.
MeNTorSHIp
for landscape architecture-students the main
mentor will be appointed (Steffen or Daniel).
Before evaluation 2 (p2) the students have to
choose their second mentor from Urbanism or
architecture. for Urbanism-students the main
mentor will be someone from Urbanism, the
second mentor from landscape architecture.
pUBlIcaTIoN
we have the ambition to publish a book with
results of the studio as research output. But
this will largely depend on the quality of the
student projects.
61
date, time and location
please check the provided schedule for the
exact date, time and location of the evaluations. Updates will be provided though blackboard and/or email.
deviations/exceptions
Deviations from required deliverables are possible under the condition of clear and solid
argumentation (especially scales levels are dependent on selection of sites and projects).
eValUaTIoN 1 (p1): SITe aNalYSIS aND
proJecT HYpoTHeSIS
EXPECTED
PRODUCTS
1. project title and abstract
Short title with +/-150 word abstract about
the project.
2. theoretical structure
a) Selected literature: minimum of three inlu
ential articles, texts, books which are for
mative in the deinition of thesis project.
b) +/- 400 word formulation of project and site.
Thesis is structured through relection on
selected articles and disciplinary debate
about landscape architecture. as a thesis
student should be able to develop a critical
stance toward the discipline and/or it’s
societal relevance
-> Material and (pre-)products of research
methodology (ar3la020), Design with natural
processes (ar3la030) and Space and Society
(ar3la040) serve as input
3. Methodology and planning
The methodology requires the student to
systematically organize the development
of means and ends during their thesis
process. why are certain analysis
done and how is the required information
obtained? are mappings, interviews, or data
analysis the most effective means to
deve lop a rational and logical support
for your hypothesis and subsequent design
choices?
In order to narrow down your project it is
useful to clearly state what theories/ields
have been inluential and what direction
you plan to take your thesis. Is your
methodology based on an anthropological,
data driven, formal, socio-political, or
historical approach? while you’ll probably
use a bit of all, emphasis is beneicial. a
schedule and diagram of the thesis period
62
should be presented that shows how:
selected methods, sources, ield, (types) of
information, feedback moments, and
critical deadlines relate over time.
-> Material and (pre-)products of research
methodology (ar3la020) serve as input
4. site research
technical mapping/analysis:
The technical mapping aims at creating an
systematic and transparent familiarization
with the site and the processes involved by
tracing and analysis of physical, biological
and cultural aspects. The mapping explores
geometry, quantity, velocity, force and/or
trajectory. How is the site is constructed, what
forces on a local and regional level currently
relate to spatial change.
Visual representations of (geo-)datasets
and how they interrelate should be carefully
selected in relation to the initial hypothesis
and project. Technical maps aim at producing
relevant and solid base maps and knowledge
from where the students design work can
depart.
o regional analysis - 1:100.000 regional maps
(min. 2 maps)
Speciication of site’s regional
signiicance and connection to other
urban, industrial, agricultural, and
environmental conditions.
relevant (measured) lows and
parameters (economic, ecologic,
social)
o local analysis: 1:500 maps (min. 3 maps),
1:500 site sections (min.: 3 sections)
relevant selection of (measured) lows
(economic, ecologic, social)
Important locations and spatial
characteristics
Spatial relationships between
land-uses)
o experiential analysis (min. 3 images)
photo/Video/Drawing analysis of site
using graphic methods from
perspective. perspective is open to
interpretation, aerial, moving, satellite
are all valid ‘perspectives’ but should
selected on the grounds of the project.
picture:
Speculative procedures
(Busquets et al, 2007)
63
ar3la010 Design Studio
o Diagrams of relevant landscape systems.
(min. 1 diagram)
Diagrammatic representation of
selected lows, objects, processes
and conditions of importance for
project. abstract graphic distillation of
project essence.
o Historical research (min 1 timeline/collage/
mapping)
relection on historical development
of topics relevant to project deinition,
for instance, if looding is relevant
than historical study of levee
construction and river dynamics might
be more relevant than road
infrastructure. Similar to group work
on rhine-Danube, but now for location.
o precedent research (min 2 project analysis)
relection on relevant precedent
project that is of great inspiration for
your design intentions and relevant to
chosen site.
-> although the emphasis of the analysis is on
spatial aspects, thorough insight in ecological
and societal aspects should be relected in your
indings as introduced in Design with natural
processes (ar3la030) and Space and Society
(ar3la040)
conceptual mapping (min. 1 a0)
The conceptual mapping is an a0 poster and/or
model that integrally represents an interpreted
analysis. The poster should visualize the thesis
project through selecting, emphasizing, juxta-,
and superimposing hypothetical links and
relationships from the technical analysis. The
conceptual mapping should be the departure
point of the design work. It should clearly
emphasize the selected parameters and topics
of interest that will be guiding for the design
process. Selection here is regarded as a crucial
design decision.
eValUaTIoN 2 (p2): SITe SelecTIoN aND
coNcepT DeSIGN
at evaluation 2 a conceptual schematic design
should be presented including last updates of
mapping and methodology. The bridge between
theory and design should be clearly presented
in written and designed work. The student
should be able to translate a project into a
spatial proposal.
Design decisions should be present at
64
regional, metropolitan, and site scale. That is:
diagrammatic regional concepts and strategies
should be made in relation to 1:500 design
sections and plans (and vice versa). last
additions to spatial analysis can be included,
but design elaborations are the focus of
evaluation 2.
1. project title and abstract
Updated: short title with +/-150 word
abstract about the project.
2. theoretical structure
abstract and 400 word relection from
evaluation 1 should be expanded and further
elaborated into research outline and >1500
word position paper. This position paper
is output of the complementary course
research methodology in landscape
architecture. while in evaluation 1 the
emphasis can be more general, analytical,
and descriptive in evaluation 2 a
clear position should be formulated with
respect to the site and the project. How can
a concept, a speciic location, and a
particular methodology visualize and make
imaginable your position through a design?
-> Material and products of research
methodology (ar3la020) and Design with
natural processes (ar3la030) serve as input
3. Methodology and planning
Updated products of evaluation 1 including
relection on planning and methodological
approach
-> Material and products of research
methodology (ar3la020) serve as input
4. update mapping
Updated products of evaluation 1
conceptual mapping in relation to concept
design
5. conceptual design
o conceptual Diagrams
Diagrammatic distillation of the
project essence
o Site Selection
Selection of intervention site
and boundaries supported by analysis
from evaluation 1
o regional concept - 1:100.000 regional maps
picture left top:
engineering cutoffs
(Mathur De cunha)
65
picture right top:
Time as organising
principle
(learning from fedex,
Jola, 2012)
picture left bottom:
(James corner)
picture right bottom:
rvtrweb
(Thun Velnikov)
ar3la010 Design Studio
(min. 1 concept maps)
Map describing regional relations
that concept design implies. for
instance, if a wetland is the topic,
what are the upstream and down
stream implications of proposed
interventions? what regional systems
does the proposal tap into or try to
change?
o Design
plans on metropolitan scale
(1:50.000/25.000) (min 1)
plans on site scale (1:5000/1000/500)
(min 1)
Design typologies/principles
relevant sections (1:500/200/100) (min 4)
o Design
plans on metropolitan scale
(1:50.000/25.000) (min 1)
plans on site scale (1:5000/1000) (min 1)
Design typologies/principles
relevant sections (1:500) (min 2)
o Technical design detail:
The most important section of the plan and
design should be selected and technically
investigated.
Selection of most important sections
of design (1:100)
plan detail of exemplary /important
parts of the design (1:200/100/50)
o 3D drawings and/or collages
3D drawings and/or collages of
design concept (min 3) (sketch/3d/
modelphotography): vantage point
should be strategically selected.
No random renders, but carefully
selected representations of concept
and site.
o working Model (planar + sectional)
conceptual working model. Not a
presentation model. Should be set up
to change. relevant topographic
resolution
-> although the emphasis is on spatial design,
ecological and societal aspects should be an
integral part of your design as introduced in
Design with natural processes (ar3la030) and
Space and Society (ar3la040)
eValUaTIoN 3 (p3): DeTaIleD DeSIGN
at evaluation 3 the concept design should
be further developed into a detailed design
proposal. evaluation 3 is really focused on
design work and can be seen as the last real
possibility to make big transformations to
plan. at evaluation 3 the focus is primarily on
the design. fulilment of evaluation 2 means
that at this point analysis and theoretical
position should be clear.
detailed design
o conceptual Diagrams
Diagrammatic distillation of the
project
o regional concept - 1:100.000 regional maps
(min. 1 concept map)
66
o 3D drawings and/or collages
- 3D drawings and/or collages of
design concept (min 3) (sketch/3d/
model photography): vantage point
should be strategically selected.
No random renders, but carefully
selected representations of concept and
site.
o working Model (planar + sectional) 1:200
high resolution working model
-> although the emphasis is on spatial design,
ecological and societal aspects should be an
integral part of your design as introduced in
Design with natural processes (ar3la030) and
Space and Society (ar3la040)
eValUaTIoN 4 (p4): fINal DeSIGN
1. theoretical and methodological structure:
Integral report
final theoretical position paper in relation
to site design and regional proposition.
abstract 100 words +/- 5000 words
content: statement of hypothesis, review
literature, development position, relection
on methodology, explanation project,
conclusion.
Should be of publishable quality.
2. review analysis
review of the most relevant analysis
drawings.
3. final design
o conceptual Diagrams
Diagrammatic distillation of the
project essence
pictures:
Masterplan and 3D
drawing. redevelopment
of the valley of museums
and academies near
villa Giulia, rome, Italy
(Garano, S. (ed.) (2006)
Valle Giulia 1911-2011. la
valle delle accademie
tra stroria e progetto.
67
rome, palombi editori/
faculty of architecture,
University of rome)
ar3la010 Design Studio
o regional concept - 1:100.000 regional maps
(min. 1 concept map)
Map describing regional relations
that concept design implies. for
instance, if a wetland is the topic,
what are the upstream and down
stream implications of proposed
interventions? what regional systems
does the proposal tap into or try to
change?
o Design
plans on metropolitan scale
(1:50.000/25.000) (min 1)
plans on site scale (1:5000/1000/500)
(min 1)
Design typologies/principles
relevant sections (1:500/200/100) (min 4)
o Design Detail
Selection of most important sections
of design (1:100)
plan detail of exemplary /important
parts of the design (1:200/100/50)
o 3D drawings and/or collages
- 3D drawings and/or collage of
design concept (min 3) (sketch/3d/
modelphotography): vantage point
should be strategically selected.
No random renders, but carefully
selected representations of concept
and site (aerial, perspective etc. are all
possible.).
o presentation Model (planar + sectional)
1:200/100
-> although the emphasis is on spatial design,
ecological and societal aspects should be an
integral part of your design as introduced in
Design with natural processes (ar3la030) and
Space and Society (ar3la040)
eValUaTIoN 5 (p5): pUBlIc
preSeNTaTIoN
1. theoretical and methodological structure:
Integral report
Same as evaluation 4 but including last
drawings and handed in as hardcopy.
2. final presentation
presentation according to personal
preference.
68
learNING oBJecTIVeS
The student:
- has knowledge of the theory, methods
and instruments of landscape
architecture: principles, design research,
design tools, strategies and methods
- is able to prepare spatial concepts and
landscape architectural designs at multiple
scales, which meet aesthetic, technical
and functional requirements as proof of
their scientiic knowledge
- is able to relate that knowledge to other
design disciplines and scientiic ields
pictures:
Design, section and
ecology. redevelopment
of the valley of museums
and academies near
villa Giulia, rome, Italy
(Garano, S. (ed.) (2006)
Valle Giulia 1911-2011. la
valle delle accademie
tra stroria e progetto.
69
rome, palombi editori/
faculty of architecture,
University of rome)
picture next page:
Bridge near NoviSad
(christopher de Vries)
70
71
SUBJecT
AR3LA020
RESEARCH
METHODOLOGY
IN LANDSCAPE
ARCHITECTURE
TUTOR TEAM
STEFFEN NIJHUIS
WORKSHOPS
JOHN LONSDALE (CARTOGRAPHIC DESIGN RESEARCH)
STEFFEN NIJHUIS (RESEARCH-BY-DESIGN)
SYBRAND TJALLINGII (S2N)
72
The course provides students with academic
knowledge and skills in order to conduct and
understand science based research and design
in landscape architecture. The course explores
basic research issues and concepts, as well as
speciic strategies for research and design in
the urban landscape and focuses on research
methodology and criteria. The course aims at
building a research framework for the graduation studio.
picture:
MethodologyBooks
(Steffen Nijhuis)
73
ar3la020 research Methodology
coUrSe coNTeNTS
alongside design craftsmanship – which is
also about communication, relection and
negotiation through design – academic skills
for design research are an important factor in
landscape architecture as a practical science.
This course aims to provide the students
with (a) important theoretical and practical
clues for developing a critical academic
attitude towards research and design in
landscape architecture, and (b) in-depth
understanding of important theories, methods
and techniques in the ield, with the focus on
research methodology. on one hand it provides
some speciic methods and techniques for
landscape architectonic research and design,
and on the other, it provides backgrounds on
general scientiic research tools and criteria.
In this respect the course contributes to the
development of a research framework for the
graduation studio.
The course is organised around three
themes: (1) landscape architecture as a
practical science, (2) Design thinking in
landscape architecture and (3) attitudes in
landscape architectonic research and design.
In landscape architecture as a practical
science students will get to know general
academic perspectives, critical thinking and
case-study research. In Design thinking in
landscape architecture the design process,
creative thinking and design research will
be elaborated. attitudes in landscape
architectonic research and design addresses
fundamental methods and techniques for
research and design. It considers landscape as
a living system (process), as a scale continuum
(context), as a 3D-environment (space) and/or
as a palimpsest (history).
oVerVIew aND STrUcTUre of THe
coUrSe
The course consists of a seminar methodology
in landscape architectonic research and
design, and writing a position paper. During
the seminar different seminal texts (books
and articles) in contemporary theory and
practice of landscape research and design
will be studied. It delivers material that can be
discussed in the group and helps to develop
an individual, and knowledge based attitude
towards landscape architecture.
Three hands-on workshops will provide the
74
students with some practical methods and
techniques for landscape architecture. The
exercises promote the dialogue between
academic research (design research) and
the design practice (research by design) in
urbanism. practitioners and researchers from
the ield will introduce and guide the students
via an assignment through different designoriented approaches such as the cartographic
design research, research-by-design and
strategy of 2 networks
finally every student has to deliver a position
paper relecting in-depth understanding,
critical relection and scientiic attitude
towards theory in landscape architecture. This
paper aims to provide a irst research outline
for the graduation project and serves as input
for the inal report.
eXpecTeD proDUcTS
seminar
as scheduled there will be a thematic
session of three verbal presentations. Three
groups of two students will prepare a verbal
presentation of 10-15 minutes addressing the
assigned text. During the presentation the
text will be summarised, analysed, discussed
and illustrated with examples (i.e. exemplary
landscape designs). Two other students will
be asked to ask questions and give a critical
relection.
Workshop
as scheduled there will be a thematic workshop
with an introductory lecture followed by short
assignment focussing on the application of a
particular method and/or technique. The handson assignment will elaborated in groups of 2
students and guided by an expert in the ield.
The outcome serves as a building block for the
design studio.
position paper
finally, every student is asked to write a
research paper of at least 3000 words which
relects an in-depth understanding and
critical attitude towards theory, methods and
techniques in landscape architecture and and
serves as input for the inal report.
learNING oBJecTIVeS
-
knowledge
of landscape architecture as a practical
science
of the theory, methods and instruments of
landscape architecture.
of other disciplines involved in spatial
design, namely architecture and urbanism.
skills
- in general academic perspectives and
criteria
- in communicating a plan to others using
visual, written and verbal methods.
-
relection
on the relationship architecture/urbanism landscape architecture.
Insight in the profession of the landscape
architect and the role of the landscape
architect in society;
reaching goals. axzo press
nijhuis, s. (2010) landscape architecture:
theory, methods and techniques, Delft
University of Technology (internal report).
nijhuis, s. and Bobbink, I. (2012/13) Design-related
research in landscape architecture. Design
research Vol. x, No. x, pp.x-x. (forthcoming)
rowe, p. G. (1987) Design Thinking. cambrigde,
Massachusetts, The MIT press.
seggern, H. von and Werner (eds.) (2008) creating
knowledge. Innovation Strategies for designing
urban landscapes, Jovis, Berlin
swafield, s. (2002) Theory in landscape
architecture. a reader. philadelphia,
University of pennsylvania press.
Yin, r. K. (2009) case Study research. Design
and Methods. london, etc., Sage publications.
recoMMeNDeD lITeraTUre
amoroso, n. (ed.) (2012) representing
landscapes: a Visual collection of landscape
architectural Drawings. london, routledge.
provided
nijhuis, s. (2012) reader research methodology
in landscape architecture. a selection of
papers. Delft
Bell, s., sarlov, I.H. and stiles, r. (eds.)
(2011) exploring the Boundaries of landscape
architecture. london, routledge
deming, M. e., and swafield, s. (2011) landscape
architecture research. Inquiry, Strategy,
Design. Hoboken, New Jersey, John wiley &
Sons.
craswell, G. (2010) writing for academic
Success. a postgraduate Guide. london, etc.,
Sage publishers.
creswell, J. W. (2009) research Design.
Qualitative, Quantitative, and Mixed Methods
approaches. london, etc., Sage publishers.
Gänshirt, c. (2003) Tools for Ideas. Birkhäuser,
Basel, Boston, Berlin.
Jong, t. M. de, and Voordt, d. J. M. van der (eds.)
(2002) ways to study and research. Urban,
architectural and technical design. Delft, DUp
Science.
Koberg, d. and Bagnall, J. (1973/2003) The
Universal Traveler. a Soft-Systems guide to
creativity, problem-solving and the process of
picture next page:
Neeltje Jans
(rijskwaterstaat)
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ar3la020 research Methodology
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77
SUBJecT
AR3LA030
DESIGN WITH
NATURAL
PROCESSES
TUTOR TEAM
SJEF JANSEN
STEFFEN NIJHUIS
78
The course provides students with a basic understanding of natural processes and systems;
the relationships between living communities
and site, climate and development. Designing
in a sustainable way means to work in accordance with nature: both to support and allow
for natural systems, as to use natural processes as co-designer.
picture:
eco quarter
(agence Ter, 2009)
79
ar3la030 Designing with Natural processes
coUrSe coNTeNTS
strategies, illustrated with precedents.
ecology is the study of organisms and their
environments and the evolutionary history
of that relationship. Natural systems consist
of different components, each with their
own processes and patterns: climate, soil,
geomorphology, hydrology, vegetation,
animals, human inluence. Their relations
in time and space determine the ield of
landscape ecology. Three major ields
of landscape ecology are important: the
functioning of ecosystems and their species
(system ecology, functions and processes,
hierarchy, time scale); spatial conditions
(ecology and space, coniguration of
landscape elements related to the survival
of species); relation to society (ecology
and society, notions of nature, nature
quality and integration of functions).
Topics include: abiotic factors (system
descriptions of different habitats), biotic
processes (succession, predation etc), biotic
patterns (plan societies and vegetation),
animal populations in time and place and
historical human inluences. Transportation
infrastructure, green infrastructure and water
infrastructure will serve as lenses to engage in
the ield of landscape ecology.
eXpecTeD proDUcTS
oVerVIew aND STrUcTUre of THe
coUrSe
learNING oBJecTIVeS
The course is directly linked with the
design studio and consist of introductory
lectures and input related to the project
on an individual bases (project related).
The focus of the lectures is on theory of
landscape ecology, illustrated with examples
of landscape designs, in order to provide
design principles, concepts and strategies.
The lectures are organised around the themes:
water infrastructure, green infrastructure and
transportation infrastructure. The lectures will
require preparation of the student by studying
assigned texts. The relationships in time and
space between climate, soil, geomorphology,
hydrology, vegetation, animals, and human
inluence will be explored in the analysis of
the project area. The application of landscape
ecology principles, concepts and strategies
is integral part of the design. Therefore it is
necessary that the student writes a plan or
“landscape ecology paragraph/chapter” with
the indings of the analysis complemented with
an argumentation and explanation of used
landscape ecology principles, concepts and/or
80
Lectures
as scheduled there will be introductory
thematic lectures. Students have to prepare
this sessions by studying assigned texts
related to the topic in order to make an active
contribution to the discussions and take full
advantage of the lectures.
studio
Students have to analyse and design
landscape ecology aspects in their project. In
order to make full use of the experts student
prepare/collect project related material and
questions concerning landscape ecology.
Landscape ecology paragraph
finally, every student is asked to write a
landscape ecology paragraph of at least
2000 words as input for the inal report (from
evaluation 2 onwards). The paragraph should
address relevant indings from the analysis
and the used landscape ecology principles,
concepts and/or strategies, illustrated with
precedents.
The student:
- has insight into and the ability to apply
and deal with natural processes, in
particular climatic, geomorphological
and vegetative processes, as well as
environmental aspects of the landscape
development
- has insight into and the ability to apply and
deal with ecosystems and their components
- has insight into and the ability to apply
and deal with the spatial conditions of
ecosystems
- has insight into and the ability to apply and
deal with the relation of ecology and society
recoMMeNDeD lITeraTUre
dunnett, n. and Hitchmough, J. (eds.) (2008) The
Dynamic landscape: Design, ecology and
Management of Naturalistic Urban planting.
london, Taylor & francis.
farina, a. (2006) principles and methods in
landscape ecology: toward a science of
landscape, Dordrecht: Springer.
forman, r., and Godron, M. (1986) landscape
ecology. New York: wiley.
forman, r. (1995) landscape Mosaics.
The ecology of landscapes and regions.
cambridge University press.
provided
nijhuis, s. (2012) reader design with natural
processes. a selection. Delft University of
Technology
Harper, d.M. and ferguson, a. (eds.) (1995) The
ecological Basis for river Management.
london, wiley
Konijnendijk, c., nilsson, K., randrup, t.B. and
schipperijn, J. (eds.) (2005) Urban forests and
Trees. a reference Book. Springer Verlag.
available for download (tu campus) http://
www.springerlink.com/content/978-3-540-276845#section=536454&page=1
Marzluff, J., shulenberger, e. et al. (2008) Urban
ecology: an International perspective on the
Interaction Between Humans and Nature.
Springer Verlag.
available for download (tu campus) http://
www.springerlink.com/content/978-0-387-73411-8/
contents/
niemela, J. et al. (eds.) (2011) Urban ecology.
patterns, processes, and applications. oxford
University press
pötz, H. and Bluezé, p. (2012) Urban green-blue
grids for sustainable and dynamic cities. Delft,
coop for life.
thompson, G.f. and steiner, f.r. (1997) ecological
Design and planning. New York: wiley.
tjallingii, s. (1996) ecological conditions.
Strategies and structures in environmental
planning, wageningen: Dlo Institute to
forestry and Nature research (IBN-Dlo).
turner, M., Gardner, r.H. and O’neill, r. V. (2003)
landscape ecology in Theory and practice:
pattern and process. Springer Verlag.
available for download (tu campus) http://www.
springer.com/life+sciences/ecology/book/978-0-38795122-5
Zonneveld, J. I. s. (1995) land ecology. an
introduction to landscape ecology as a base
for land evaluation, land management and
conservation, amsterdam: SpB academic
publishing.
picture next page:
aerial picture windmills
(alex Macclean)
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ar3la030 Designing with Natural processes
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83
SUBJecT
AR3LA040
SPACE
AND
SOCIETY
TUTOR
MACHIEL VAN DORST
LECTURERS
MACHIEL VAN DORST
(ENVIRONMENT-BEHAVIOUR STUDIES)
RENE VAN DER VELDE
(ENVIRONMENTAL PHILOSOPHY IN THE CONTEXT OF ARCHITECTURE & THE ARTS)
DIRK SIJMONS
(ENVIRONMENTAL PHILOSOPHY IN A HISTORICAL CONTEXT)
84
There are different perspectives on the use of
the living environment; these are determined
by the different disciplines in people-environment studies and by the type of environment.
Space and society touches upon four relations
between people and their environment and on
specialties in these ields.
picture:
who will save the world
(Theo Deutinger)
85
ar3la040 Space and Society
coUrSe coNTeNT
There are different perspectives on the use of
the living environment; these are determined by
the different disciplines in people-environment
studies and by the type of environment.
Space and society touches upon four relations
between people and their environment and on
specialties in these ields.
The four discourses include:
environmental psychology
environment-behaviour relations, perception
and cognitions and facilitating primary needs;
environmental sociology
Social behaviour in the public realm
environmental philosophy
Inluence of culture on the physical
environment and visa versa
Interaction design
community design, city gaming and other
forms of co-creating with inhabitants.
The four discourses will be underpinned with
literature and there will be practical examples
of specialisations in the societal design:
- lifestyle design; differences between
inhabitants, visitors and people passing-by
- child friendly cities
- Social Safety design
- Territorial behaviour of people in public
space
- collective management; maintaining a
shared space
- wayinding and other examples
oVerVIew aND STrUcTUre of THe
coUrSe
Theory and examples will be presented in
lectures and practiced in ieldwork. The
lectures and ieldwork form complementary
components in the course. The ieldwork
starts with an introduction on behaviour
observations. The focus of the lectures is on
the four discourses mentioned before. In
environmental psychology environmentbehaviour relations will be touched upon:
the basic theories on human-environment
interaction dealing with topics like privacy,
territorial behaviour, liveability and the
value of green. environmental Sociology
addresses social behaviour in the public realm.
environmental philosophy will discuss major
86
topics in environmental ethics and landscape
philosophy, such as:changing attitudes and
approaches towards nature, landscape and the
environment in an international & historical
perspective, current positions in environmental
philosophy and aspects determining the
way we think about the aesthetics of nature
and landscape. Interaction design is an
introduction of the possibilities of interaction
design (co-creating, city gaming, etc.).
The lectures will require preparation of the
student by studying assigned texts. fieldwork
is focused on objectivity in observation and
the perception of users on their environment.
The ieldwork starts with an introduction on
behaviour observations and a group excursion
in the public space of Delft. examples of the
theory will be explained in the public space
of Delft. In a next step students will analyse
(in small groups) a speciic place in Delft on
environmental behaviour interactions. every
group will design an intervention to inluence
these interactions, build it and test in reality.
every group will present their results in a short
movie. assignments range from making an
observation report from a speciic angle on a
location in use, collecting cognitive maps from
different type of users on the centre of Delft,
to design a small scale intervention in public
space that may motivate sustainable behaviour
(examples will be given).
eXpecTeD proDUcTS
Theory and examples will be presented in
lectures and practiced in ieldwork.
Lectures and written examination (50%)
as scheduled there will be introductory
thematic lectures. Students have to prepare
this sessions by studying assigned texts
related to the topic in order to make an active
contribution to the discussions and take
full advantage of the lectures. at the end
of the lecture series students are to sit an
examination on the material presented.
products of ield work (50%)
Handing in assignment 1 and 2 and assessment
of assignment 3
learNING oBJecTIVeS
The student:
- will know the different discourses that are
been used in people-environment studies
- will know the basic literature, their common
-
-
ground and the differences
is able to use people-environment research
as a back up for their decisions and as
inspiration for there design
will know the major handles and leavers
for people-related research in theory and
practice
recoMMeNDeD lITeraTUre
alexander, c. (2002). The Nature of order. an
essay on the art of Building and The Nature
of the Universe, Berkeley: The center for
environmental Structure.
sanoff, H. (1999) community participation
Methods in Design and planning. london,
wiley
sevenant, M. (2010) Variation in landscape
perception and preference. experiences from
case studies in rural and urban landscapes
observed by different groups of respondents.
Ghent University, Department of Geography.
provided
Van dorst, M. (2012) reader space and society.
a selection of papers. Delft University of
Technology
Bell, p.a., Greene, t.c., fisher, J.d., and Baum,
a. (2001) environmental psychology. london,
lawrence erlbaum associates.
Bourassa, s. c. (1991) The aesthetics of
landscape. london/New York, Belhaven press.
cronon, W. (1999) Uncommon Ground:
rethinking the Human place in Nature. w. w.
Norton & company
Gehl, J. (2010) cities for people. New York,
Island press
Golledge, r.G. (ed.) (1999) wayinding Behaviour.
cognitive mapping and other spatial
processes. Baltimore & london, The Johns
Hopkins University press
Hall, t. (1990) The hidden dimension. New York,
anchor Books
Jacobs, J. (1992) The Death and life of Great
american cities. New York, Vintage Books
Kaplan, r., and Kaplan, s. (1989) The experience
of Nature. a psychological perspective.
cambridge, cambridge University press.
Lynch, K. (1960) The Image of the city.
cambridge, MIT press.
nasar, J.L. ed. (2008) environmental aesthetics.
Theory, research and applications. cambridge,
cambridge University press.
nijhuis, s, Lammeren, r van & Hoeven, fd van der
(eds.) (2011) exploring the Visual landscape.
advances in physiognomic landscape
research in the Netherlands. amsterdam: IoS
press
picture next page:
Het Zwin
(rijkswaterstaat)
87
ar3la030 Designing with Natural processes
88
89
ScHeDUle MSc 3
90
ar3La010:
ar3La020:
ar3La030:
SN: Steffen Nijhuis
cV: christopher de Vries
DJ: Daniel Jauslin
pB: pierre Bélanger
UH: Ulf Hackauf
DS: Sirk Sijmons
SN: Steffen Nijhuis
IB: Inge Bobbink
Jl: John lonsdale
ST: Sybrand Tjallingii
SN: Steffen Nijhuis
Jl: John lonsdale
SJ: Sjef Jansen
ar3La040:
MD: Machiel van Dorst
rV: rene van der Velde
91
Schedule
NoTeS
92
NoTeS
93