Lectures, design charrette, visiting pros
featured at 2010 ALSA Aggie Workshop

 

Design charrette at Aggie Workshop 2010 from TAMU College of Architecture on Vimeo.

The 35th Annual Aggie Workshop, a three-day conference organized and hosted by the Texas A&M student chapter of the American Society of Landscape Architects, bridged the gap between students and professionals in landscape architecture and urban planning during its Feb. 11-13 run.

The 2010 Workshop featured luminary speakers, design charrettes and roundtable discussions with industry professionals structured around the theme, "Enrichment," said event chair Elizabeth Chapman, a fourth-year Bachelor of Landscape Architecture student. Workshop participants explored how landscape architects can provide an enriching experience through design work and the natural environment and, in turn, improve the quality of life in communities.

"In a continuously evolving world, people have placed a monetary value on the landscape," said Chapman. "As landscape architects, we have the opportunity to demonstrate that the environment is a critical asset and a beneficial resource."

Grant Jones, an ASLA Fellow and founding principal of the Seattle design and planning firm Jones and Jones, delivered the 2010 Workshop's keynote address Feb. 12. A landscape architect and poet, Jones has practiced and preached ecological design for more than three decades.

Jones received a Bachelor of Architecture degree from the University of Washington and a Master of Landscape Architecture degree from Harvard’s School of Design, where he won the Frederick Sheldon Traveling Fellowship to research environmental design adaptations in South America and Western Europe.

He's an affiliate professor of landscape architecture at the University of Washington and has also held academic positions at Texas A&M, the University of California-Berkeley, Harvard, the University of Oregon, the University of Virginia, Ohio State University, and has lectured at thirty university departments of landscape architecture.

Jones & Jones, which performs nature-centered, culture-based, community-driven design, has completed more than 650 projects in the Americas, Asia, Europe, Australia and Africa.

Some of the firm's many projects are the Paris Pike Historic Highway in Kentucky, the Arizona-Sonora Desert Museum in Tuscon, Ariz., Disney’s Animal Kingdom in Orlando, the Mountains-to-Sound Greenway in Washington, the Commons Park in Denver and America’s first wildlife highway, U.S. Highway 93, through the Flathead Reservation in western Montana.

Other industry professionals who spoke at Aggie Workshop 2010 were:

  • Earl Broussard, president/founder of Austin-based TBG Partners, a leading architecture and planning firm;
  • Jim Carrillo, director of planning at Richardson, Texas-based Halff Associates Inc., one of the nation's leading engineering/architecture consulting firms;
  • John Crompton, distinguished professor in Texas A&M's Department of Recreation, Park and Tourism Sciences; and
  • David Hopman, assistant professor of landscape architecture, the University of Texas at Arlington.

Workshop kicked off with a "meet and greet" Feb. 11 at the Corner Bar and Grille on 401 University Dr. in College Station.

The Feb. 11 agenda included guest speakers and a half-day design charrette in which students worked side-by-side with design professionals. A semi-formal casino night will cap the day's events.

The Saturday, Feb. 13 agenda featured more lectures, a graphic workshop, panel discussions, and wrapped up with a reception at the Fox and the Hound Pub and Grille.


 

- Posted: Mar. 02, 2010-



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