Stoss Landscape Urbanism——2010 TOPOS 景观奖得主

Stoss Landscape Urbanism - TOPOS Landscape Award 2010

by Dec 01, 2010
by 风景园林新青年 Dec 01, 2010

Stoss Landscape Urbanism,一所由Chris Reed领衔的设计与规划工作室,赢得了2010年TOPOS景观奖。本文展示了Stoss在推动景观都市主义讨论方面的一些主要作品,以及该工作室的工作理念。

Stoss Landscape Urbanism, a critical design and planning studio headed by Chris Reed operates at the juncture of landscape architecture, urban design and planning, has won the Topos Landscape Award in 2010. Topos recognized Stoss for their theoretical and practical contributions to advancing the development of landscape architecture in dynamic systems, and to encourage discussion on landscape urbanism.

声明:此文为正式授权文章,已征得Stoss Landscape Urbanism同意在风景园林新青年(Youth Landscape Architecture)上发表,严禁转载。
Notice: This article is a reprinted version with the permission of Stoss Landscape Urbanism. Do not copy without permission.

2010 marks the fifth time the Tops Landscape Award has been granted. This time the distinction went to the landscape architecture firm Stoss Landscape Urbanism based in Boston, MA, USA. Topos recognized Stoss for their theoretical and practical contributions to advancing the development of landscape architecture in dynamic systems, and to encourage discussion on landscape urbanism. The critical design and planning studio headed by Chris Reed operates at the juncture of landscape architecture, urban design and planning. Stoss has won national and international recognition for landscape and urbanism projects rooted in infrastructure, functionality and ecology.

Landscape Urbanism In Practive

By Chris Reed

Stoss is at base a practice vehicle for research and experimentation, for testing broader ideas about landscape and the city within the context of the evolving theory on landscape urbanism. How do landscape urbanist ideas and agendas play out when you directly engage the systems, economies, constituencies, materials and media of the real world, the very stuff that forms the underpinnings of and context for the developing the? Or, more projectively, how might this direct engagement with critical design practices help to enrich and inform the theoretical discussions at hand?

Our landscape urbanist approach takes on three core issues of scale, time, and flexibility. We believe projects must be conceived and positioned relative to large-scale geographical, environmental and infrastructural systems, no matter if the site in question is small or large. Projects must tap into the evolving dynamics of ecological and civic or social systems in order to remain healthy and resilient. And projects must set up conditions for a wide range of uses and appropriations, for both those we can imagine now and those we cannot, in order to be viable immediately and for years to come. To achieve these ends, we favor a performance-based approach over one that is primarily physical, spatial, or visual. We are especially interested in how landscapes work: how they function urbanistically, socially, hydrologically, environmentally; how they reinforce existing city frameworks and how they invent new ones; and how they may support a range of complementary and sometimes contradictory civic programs across a multi-faceted, layered, and thickened urban field. Such an approach requires inventive analysis of the performance and programmatic requirements of social spaces and infrastructural or environmental systems: how big? How does it operate? In what configuration or orientation? And in what relation to its various parts? And it invokes wide-ranging, creative brainstorming and research-based methodologies that open up possibilities and potentials and allow for discoveries made along the way.

Such an approach yields new types of open space, landscape, infrastructure, and urbanistic strategies that address multiple functional, fiscal, and social/cultural goals simultaneously. These strategies are grounded in the particularities of local conditions, yet they are inventive and thickly layered in order to tap into broader trends and larger systems. And they privilege a regenerative approach to civic space and urban landscapes as complex, living, and evolving entities that are socially, ecologically, and fiscally sustainable through time. At larger scales, on complex sites, projects engage systems and networks that extend locally, regionally, and globally, and explore new techniques in drawing and representation. Proposals for time-based brownfield recovery strategies, like that at the Silresim Superfund Site in Lowell, Massachusetts, directly engage the technologies and timelines of environmental remediation, suppressed ecologies and diminished hydrologies still at work, and newly activated, dynamic stakeholder networks that can propel the work forward. Invited completion proposals for an ecology-driven urban framework and fabric (River+City+Life/ Lower Don Lands, Toronto, Canada) and for the social, ecological, and cultural re-calibration of 19th century drinking water infrastructures (Staging Mt. Tabor/ Mt. Tabor Reservoirs, Portland, USA) expand these ideas and allow us to test, concepturally, our own formulations of landcape urbanist ideas in large and complex public realms- at least as speculative proposals. At smaller scales, or with limited programs and budgets, projects become opportunities to focus laser-sharp on isolated issues that can collectively inform the broader investigations at hand. Many take the form of simple experiments with the materials and media of landscape. They include vegetal investigations into landscape and ecological succession (Eco-Lab and Bass River Park, both in Massachusetts, USA); mineral displays that measure the effects of wather and time on a field of colorful, textured aggregate piles (Stock-Pile at Radcliffe Yard, Cambridge, USA); synthetic installations that push the physical limits of recycled rubber surfaces (Safe Zone at the International Garden Festival in Quebec, Canada); and hydrologic cycles that integrate stormwater capture, cleansing and irrigation strategies, groundwater re-charge, and steam generation (Erie Street Plaza, Milwaukee, USA). Still others are studies in the ways people interact with open-ended designs, whether with earthen form (Farlin Park, Green Bay, USA and Safe Zone) or with material pattern and texture (Perkins Park, Massachusetts, USA and Erie Plaza). In all of these, extended monitoring and documentation of ecological, social, and/or hydrologic behaviors and effects inform ongoing research and project-making at multiple scales and on complex sites the world over.

Collectively, these inquiries and experiments are in their infancy- it’s not yet been 15 years since Charles Waldheim’s seminal 1997 conference in Chicago on landscape urbanism (to name but one touchstone), and we at Stoss have barely been at work a full decade. Many questions remain, for us and for others, relative to how landscape urbanism as a set of ideas and practices is played out- and refined, or even reformulated. After all, landscape urbanist thinking- flexible, responsive, adaptable, open-ended- has yet to be fully realized or tested at the scale of the city, in all its complexity. This will come. Just give it, and us, time.

Photo Credit: Stoss Landscape Urbanism

Photo Credit: Stoss Landscape Urbanism

Photo Credit: Stoss Landscape Urbanism

Photo Credit: Stoss Landscape Urbanism

Photo Credit: Stoss Landscape Urbanism

Photo Credit: Stoss Landscape Urbanism

Photo Credit: Stoss Landscape Urbanism

Photo Credit: Stoss Landscape Urbanism

Photo Credit: Stoss Landscape Urbanism

Photo Credit: Stoss Landscape Urbanism



无觅相关文章插件,快速提升流量

风景园林新青年

风景园林新青年

6 discussions
  1. *ff* says:

    什么时候有翻译啊

  2. 蔡小芋 says:

    很喜欢stoss的设计
    最近不是刚拿下了minneapolis的水岸设计嘛!
    在考虑要不要去那里实习

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

风景园林新青年

风景园林新青年

行业 西方建筑 公共交通 讲座 Peter Walker 天津大学 马克 野生动物廊道 何巧女 Juergen Weidinger 万科 几何 园博会 Media Ship 美术馆 城市景观 鸟类 工程 地砖 垃圾 游乐场 公园 风景区 五角大楼 设景 铺装 广场 银泉市 Silver Spring Vista Hermosa 调查问卷 GSD 毛细水 ASLA 多伦多 普渡大学 批评 人居环境 学习方法 王欣 Prof. Jürgen Weidinger 挪威 城市空间 康奈尔大学 9.11 张唐景观 WEST8 绿色屋顶 钢笔画 IGA 三倾园 文化景观 加州花园 MLA TAMU 北欧 树屋 玛莎·施瓦茨 保研 布鲁克林 鹈鹕湾 Gesche Joost James Corner Prof. Wolfgang Jonas 可持续 青海 步行街 客座教授 清华 美国 历史理论 博士 牛雄 反思 NITA 纪念性景观 视觉文化 捷得国际 自然文化资源 新加坡 实验 展览 休斯顿探索公园 ARC 佛罗里达 Brownfield 年会 岭南园林 低能耗 成范永 设计展 护栏 绿墙 新青年读老经典 空间 教学 日本 预制混凝土 教育 迪士尼 Disney 苏州古典园林 香港 购物中心 伊利诺伊大学 UIUC 公共花园 可持续城市 碳补偿林 城市 志愿者 便携 公益 会议 法国 沥青 辰山植物园 方塔园 铁路 年报 场所 布鲁克林大桥 Vertical Greening Systems 庭院 孟兆祯 雪铁龙公园 哈普林 halprin 绿道 Prof. Nigel Cross 雕塑公园 雕塑 檀馨 Ruggeri 喷泉 交通节点 经验 考研 设计竞赛 王劲韬 机场 安友丰 LAM 湿地 沙龙 Stoss Landscape Urbanism 土人景观 盆景园 欧洲 德国市民花园 SWA 马晓暐 环境效应 商业建筑 居住区 加拿大 北京 Malden 手绘 国家公园 新年 珊瑚礁 政治 绿色设计 花园 风景园林新青年,就在你身边 纵向耕作 冯纪忠 鹿特丹 技术 维吉尼亚理工大学 可持续化 参数化设计 低收入住宅 清华同衡学术周 华南 泰山 历史 矶琦新 留学 世博 托滕堡公园 保护 上海 种植装置 证书 老人 空气污染 国际风景园林师高峰论坛 概念方案 城乡 香格里拉植物园 华盛顿 LIM 毕业设计 枡野俊明 宾夕法尼亚大学 狼牙山 职业实践 Ron Henderson 什刹海 自然观 散步道 开放空间 Prof. Gesche Joost 刘秀晨 风景园林学会2015年会 跨学科教育 Julius Fabos 海平面上升 摄影 俞昌斌 陈俊愉 绿色基础设施 新西兰 托马斯·丘奇 BIM Waterboxx 如园 永昌河 住宅花园 洪盈玉 英国 布法罗河湾散步道 Mader 南湖中央公园 风景园林月 IFLA 太阳能 2012IFLA亚太区会议 区域园林 韩炳越 禅修 2012IFLA 就业 理论 Dr. Rosan Chow 滨水 哈佛 纽约 维格兰 儿童 巴塞罗那 宋晔皓 Diana Balmori 深圳前海 卡尔维诺 TOPOS 水文 RTD 马萨诸塞大学 UMass 多样性 校园 纪念碑 幻觉 城市建设 龙安寺 数字图解 铺地 灾后 中央公园 流浪汉 Gleisdreieck 广州市绿化公司 骑行 首尔 Hans Joachim Mader 论坛 ASLA学生奖 张乔松 景观都市主义 生态 世界风景园林师高峰论坛 Kingston University 洛阳 北林 裁员 西安世园会 罗马奖 非言述性和默会性知识 翻译 设计未来城市 西班牙 Xeritown 种植 安藤忠雄 图解 建筑 LABash 2013北京园博会 棕地 京津冀 日本设计 墨西哥 风景园林学 LEPC 植物 贝聿铭 夏成钢 北角公园 苗木 联谊 德国 SANAA 朱育帆 Jack Ahern buffalo 城市雨水 教学元素 旅游 现代主义 水盒子 意识形态 盐湖城 合作 韩国 地震 迪士尼音乐厅 logo 人文 环境 书评 水景 设计研究 雨水 禅意 地域性景观 河流 弗吉尼亚大学 UVa 台湾 碛口古镇 AGER Greenway 希望小学 植物园 枯山水 北川 迪拜 自杀 Michael Van Valkenburgh and Associates Prof. Loidl-Reisch 数字景观 竞赛 瑠公圳 钓鱼岛 视频 雨洪管理 经典 风景园林学会2013年会 沃夫岗·哈勃 风景园林 原子城 古根海姆博物馆 朱胜萱 数字化 风景园林学会2011年会 创业 长椅