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Landscape Architecture Magazine
CONTRIBUTORS
LETTERS
CHANGE ORDER
FOREGROUND
IN SITU, AGAIN • IN ATLANTA, A 30-YEAR-OLD EXPERIMENTAL GARDEN FINDS A NEW, AND MORE CONTEXTUAL, HOME.
SPACE TO GROW • DRYLAND FARMING COMES TO THE SUBURBS, THANKS TO AN INNOVATIVE COMMUNITY PARK.
FIRST STEPS FOR FOOTPRINTS • A SACRED LANDSCAPE BECOMES A NATIONAL MONUMENT IN ARIZONA.
SHUFFLING THE PIECES • AT THE RIDGES SANCTUARY, A NEW MASTER PLAN ALLOWS BETTER ACCESS TO A UNIQUE GREAT LAKES LANDSCAPE.
BLOSSOM BUDS • A PATCHWORK OF HYPERLOCAL, ORGANIC FLOWER FARMS IS BLOOMING IN SOUTHERN CALIFORNIA.
PREPARED TO CHANGE • IN VERMONT, WHERE THE OLD WAY IS OFTEN THE ONLY WAY, LANDSCAPE ARCHITECTS GRAPPLE WITH MOVING FORWARD AFTER ANOTHER HISTORIC FLOOD.
BURN IT UP • WAYS TO KEEP WARM WHEN THE TEMPERATURE COOLS DOWN.
FEATURES
BIG TENT • A TIME-WORN ICON OF SPOKANE’S PAST BECOMES A NEW SYMBOL OF THE CITY’S RENAISSANCE.
THE BACK
HARD WINS
AS NECESSARY AS FOOD • BY CORNELIA HAHN OBERLANDER, WITH AN INTRODUCTION BY JANE MAH HUTTON; MONTREAL: CONCORDIA UNIVERSITY PRESS AND THE CANADIAN CENTRE FOR ARCHITECTURE; 120 PAGES, $21.95.
BOOKS OF INTEREST
2023 LAMMY AWARD WINNERS KNOW GRAPHICS, MESSAGING, AND PERSUASION • The judges tell us what advertising hits home for them—and two recent LAM surveys dug deeper.
BACKSTORY • SKETCHES HELP THE JAMES DOYLE DESIGN ASSOCIATES TEAM WORK THROUGH SOME TRICKY ANGLES.