ABSTRACT

As ecology becomes the new engineering, the projection of landscape as infrastructure—the contemporary alignment of the disciplines of landscape architecture, civil engineering, and urban planning— has become pressing. Predominant challenges facing urban regions and territories today—including shifting climates, material flows, and population mobilities, are addressed and strategized here. Responding to the under-performance of master planning and over-exertion of technological systems at the end of twentieth century, this book argues for the strategic design of "infrastructural ecologies," describing a synthetic landscape of living, biophysical systems that operate as urban infrastructures to shape and direct the future of urban economies and cultures into the 21st century.

Pierre Bélanger is Associate Professor of Landscape Architecture and Co-Director of the Master in Design Studies Program at Harvard University’s Graduate School of Design. As part of the Department of Landscape Architecture and the Advansed Studies Program, Bélanger teaches and coordinates graduate courses on the convergence of ecology, infrastructure and urbanism in the interrelated fields of design, planning and engineering. Dr. Bélanger is author of the 35th edition of the Pamphlet Architecture Series from Princeton Architectural Press, GOING LIVE: from States to Systems (pa35.net), co-editor with Jennifer Sigler of the 39th issue of Harvard Design Magazine, Wet Matter, and co-author of the forthcoming volume ECOLOGIES OF POWER: Mapping Military Geographies & Logistical Landscapes of the U.S. Department of Defense. As a landscape architect and urbanist, he is the recipient of the 2008 Canada Prix de Rome in Architecture and the Curator for the Canada Pavilion ad Canadian Exhibition, "EXTRACTION," at the 2016 Venice Architecture Biennale (extraction.ca).

chapter |1 pages

Copyright Page

chapter |2 pages

Title Page

chapter |1 pages

Table of Contents

chapter |2 pages

Foreword

chapter |9 pages

Preface

chapter |32 pages

Prepositions

chapter |32 pages

A Landscape Manifesto

chapter |36 pages

Systems of Systems

chapter |40 pages

Redefining Infrastructure

chapter |36 pages

Synthetic Surfaces

chapter |62 pages

Ecologies of Disassembly

chapter |42 pages

Landscape as Infrastructure

chapter |38 pages

Foodshed

chapter |26 pages

Metabolic Landscape

chapter |66 pages

Regionalization

chapter |53 pages

Infrastructural Ecologies

chapter |4 pages

Imaging Infrastructure

chapter |12 pages

Re-Reading Infrastructure

chapter |2 pages

Urbanism, without Infrastructure?

chapter |2 pages

Acknowledgments