ABSTRACT

Aimed at students and instructors, alongside practitioners and researchers, in landscape architecture and its allied disciplinary fields, this book provides the reader with a clear framework of theoretical and practical considerations for interpreting and designing post-industrial landscapes. One of the biggest contemporary challenges currently faced in the profession is how to effectively understand and work with the transformational possibilities of post-industrial landscapes, while negotiating significant spatial challenges, such as degradation and fragmentation.

Transformative Ground: A Field Guide to the Post-Industrial Landscape presents a range of theoretical perspectives and practical approaches, offering a broad scope of contemporary design strategies that deal with post-industrial landscapes. Through a series of thematic chapters, allied with precedents from leading design offices, this book identifies how the context of post-industrial landscapes has compelled shifts in fundamental ideas that underpin landscape design. As a richly illustrated account of this transformative ground, this book provides a must-have guide to help you reimagine the post-industrial landscape.

chapter |7 pages

Introduction

Transformative ground

chapter Chapter 1|21 pages

Relinquishing control

chapter Chapter 2|21 pages

The agency of the wild

chapter Chapter 3|17 pages

A menacing dragon

chapter Chapter 4|22 pages

The entanglement

chapter Chapter 5|18 pages

Everyday aesthetics

chapter Chapter 6|31 pages

Transitional urbanism

chapter Chapter 7|21 pages

The mesh and the matrix

chapter Chapter 8|20 pages

Relational scales

chapter Chapter 9|23 pages

Enlivened temporality