2. Cultural Landscape as Living Landscape: Challenge for Policy and Design
Living Landscape
3. Cultural Landscape as Living Landscape: Challenge for Policy and Design
Living Landscape
Multifunctionality
4. Cultural Landscape as Living Landscape: Challenge for Policy and Design
Living Landscape
Multifunctionality
The Challenge
5. Cultural Landscape as Living Landscape: Challenge for Policy and Design
Living Landscape
Multifunctionality
The Challenge
6.
7.
8. township, n.
Etymology: Old English túnscipe, < tún (see town n.) + -scipe, -ship suffix.
Compare, for sense, landscipe, and German dorfschaft. After the Old
English period the word was apparently disused till 15th cent.: see sense 2.
†1. In Old English, The inhabitants or population of a tún or village
collectively; the community dwelling in and occupying a tún (town n. 1).
11. Understanding landscape as lived practice calls into question many
fundamental assumptions about space, objects, and representation on
which the design professions—and design education—rest. It therefore has
the potential to transform the process, products, and social mission of
architecture, landscape architecture, and urban design. Living Landscape
is a wide-ranging, open-ended forum for exploring these implications,
through theory and practice, at every scale of the designed environment,
from territory to site to building.
from introduction to Living Landscape
33. We have in the past looked at the various functions of landscape mostly
from a series of single subject perspectives. This has had only limited
success in reducing countryside conflicts. Planning and management
decisions for improving crop production, biodiversity, landscape, amenity,
or other environmental functions, cannot be made outside the context of
human needs and wishes. Single subject approaches fail to incorporate
this context and, moreover, fail to consider how promoting one
countryside interest will interact with others.
Gary Fry, ‘Multifunctional landscapes—toward transdisciplinary research,’
Landscape and Urban Planning 57 (2001)
34.
35. Cultural Landscape as Living Landscape: Challenge for Policy and Design
Living Landscape
Multifunctionality
The Challenge
39. Supranational policy (UN, WTO, EU, etc)
National Policy
Regional and subregional policy
Local landscapes
40. Supranational policy (UN, WTO, EU, etc)
National Policy
Regional and subregional policy
Local landscapes
41. Supranational policy (UN, WTO, EU, etc)
National Policy
Regional and subregional policy
Local landscapes
42. Supranational policy (UN, WTO, EU, etc)
National Policy
Regional and subregional policy
Local landscapes
43. Supranational policy (UN, WTO, EU, etc)
National Policy
Regional and subregional policy
Local landscapes
44. Supranational policy (UN, WTO, EU, etc)
National Policy
Regional and subregional policy
Local landscapes
Landscape Architecture
45. Supranational policy (UN, WTO, EU, etc)
National Policy
Regional and subregional policy
Landscape Architecture
Local landscapes
46. Supranational policy (UN, WTO, EU, etc)
National Policy
Regional and subregional policy
Landscape Architecture
Local landscapes
47. Supranational policy (UN, WTO, EU, etc)
National Policy
Regional and subregional policy
Landscape Architecture
Local landscapes
48. Supranational policy (UN, WTO, EU, etc)
National Policy
Regional and subregional policy
Landscape Architecture
Local landscapes
49. Supranational policy (UN, WTO, EU, etc)
National Policy
Regional and subregional policy
Visions, Narratives, Stories
Local landscapes
50. Landscape research offers a way to start understanding human processes
and physical environmental changes in the context of people’s responses.
It can set individual and community views alongside the large-scale
strategic policies and investments of national and supra-national
institutions. The knowledge it produces can be used to help people
respond to threatened and imminent physical change.
ESF Science Policy Brief 41, ‘Landscape in a Changing World,’ 2010