Academic literature on the topic 'Florida. Board of Landscape Architects'

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Journal articles on the topic "Florida. Board of Landscape Architects"

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Brzuszek, Robert F., Richard L. Harkess, and Eric Stortz. "Perceptions of the Importance of Plant Material Knowledge by Practicing Landscape Architects in the Southeastern United States." HortTechnology 21, no. 1 (February 2011): 126–30. http://dx.doi.org/10.21273/horttech.21.1.126.

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This study evaluates the attitudes and perceptions of practicing landscape architects in the southeastern United States with regards to the importance of horticultural knowledge for their profession. A 20-question survey instrument was mailed to 120 landscape architects who were listed as members of the American Society of Landscape Architects. The survey included various questions related to education and experience of the respondents and their peers with plants. The response rate was 52.5% (n = 63) and the majority of respondents were seasoned landscape architects in the states of Louisiana, Mississippi, Arkansas, Tennessee, Alabama, Georgia, and Florida that primarily served residential and commercial markets. The results from this study showed that the population of respondents strongly felt that plant knowledge is an important part of their professional skills, and recent graduates of landscape architecture and the profession as a whole appear more distanced from having strong plant expertise. Despite the increasing challenges for more formal plant education, there continues to be a need for both formal and informal extended education classes.
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Livingston, M. "American Society of Landscape Architects Annual Meeting & Expo Fort Lauderdale, Florida, October 7- 10, 2005." Landscape Journal 25, no. 2 (January 1, 2006): 262–63. http://dx.doi.org/10.3368/lj.25.2.262.

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Hansen de Chapman, Gail, and Claire Lewis. "Ten Strategies for Working With Your Home Owner Association to Convert to a Florida-Friendly Yard." EDIS 2015, no. 2 (March 13, 2015): 9. http://dx.doi.org/10.32473/edis-ep513-2015.

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Many homeowners are beginning to rethink their landscapes for several reasons, including mandated water and fertilizer restrictions, increasing maintenance costs, and concern for the environment. But over sixty million people now live in neighborhoods governed by Homeowner Associations, whose regulations can make it difficult to implement some changes by mandating types of plants, percentages of turf and plant material, location of plant materials, and restricting specialty gardens to back yards. More environmentally sound landscapes are possible with careful planning and design, and by using an educated and knowledgeable approach to working with the HOA board to gain approval for a new landscape. This 9-page fact sheet offers several strategies for working within HOA regulations to gain approval for a Florida-Friendly landscape. Written by Gail Hansen and Claire Lewis, and published by the UF Department of Environmental Horticulture, February 2015. (Photo credit: Florida-Friendly Landscaping™ Program) ENH1252/EP513: Ten Strategies for Working With Your Home Owner Association to Convert to a Florida-Friendly Yard (ufl.edu)
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Rogozhina, Viktoria V., and Anastasia E. Nalizko. "Architect Sergey Mityagin: More than 50 Years of Urban Development Activities." Town-Planning Law 2 (April 18, 2024): 22–25. http://dx.doi.org/10.18572/2500-0292-2024-2-22-25.

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Sergey Mityagin — Нonored Architect of the Russian Federation, Doctor of Architecture, Professor, Academician of the Russian Academy of Architecture and Construction Sciences, member of the Board of the St. Petersburg Branch of the Union of Architects of Russia, Director General of the Scientific Research Institute of Perspective Urban Development. The author of more than 400 scientific and scientific-methodical, 4 monographs, workbooks, about 100 methodological and research works in the field of ecologically-oriented landscape, marine (aquatorial), strategic spatial and territorial planning.
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Michałowski, Andrzej. "KRAJOBRAZ KULTUROWY NA LIŚCIE ŚWIATOWEGO DZIEDZICTWA – POLSKIE DOŚWIADCZENIA." Protection of Cultural Heritage, no. 4 (November 29, 2017): 21–30. http://dx.doi.org/10.24358/odk_2017_04_03.

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The central organisation around which Polish cooperation with UNESCO on implementing the World Heritage Convention has been concentrated from the beginning is the Polish National Committee ICOMOS.The cooperation has been organised by institutions and people connected in some way with the Committee. Specialised institutions were gradually joining the cooperation. One example of such measures was the appointment of the Board of Historical Gardens and Palaces Conservation, transformed subsequently into the Centre for the Protection of Historic Landscape in Warsaw. A „garden” conservation society has gathered around this institution, composed of art historians, landscape architects, architects and gardeners. They have been carrying out interdisciplinary works concerning historic gardens and cultural landscapes in Poland. Their cooperation with the Polish National Committee ICOMOS andthe International Committee of Historic Gardens and Sites ICOMOS – IFLA was connected with the activities of UNESCO. Major activities of the Centre include: valuation and assessment of cultural landscapes for the World Heritage List; drawing up, in collaboration with the Fürst-Pückler-Park Bad Muskau Foundation, an application for the inscription of Park Muskau in the UNESCO World Heritage List; organisation of international conference: „The Regional Expert Meeting on Cultural Landscapes in Eastern Europe” in Białystok in 1999 at the request of WHC UNESCO; organisation of international conference „Cemetery Art” in 1993 at the request of WHC UNESCO, along with accompanying exhibitions concerning specific issues, organised by the Board of Historical Gardens and Palaces Conservation in Warsaw.
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Weitze, Karen J. "In the Shadows of Dresden." Journal of the Society of Architectural Historians 72, no. 3 (September 1, 2013): 322–57. http://dx.doi.org/10.1525/jsah.2013.72.3.322.

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In the Shadows of Dresden: Modernism and the War Landscape focuses on British-American test complexes and lithographs devised to understand German and Japanese military targets of World War II. Project sites stretched from England and Scotland to Maryland, Massachusetts, New Jersey, Utah, and Florida. Vignettes of Axis-built environments featured only those forms and details that were deemed essential, complemented by the abstracted target maps. Together these models and maps inaugurated a new way of looking at cities and built environments as war landscapes. In this article Karen J. Weitze studies the roles of the participating architects, engineers, artists, and art historians—Marc Peter Jr., John Burchard, Henry Elder, Gerald K. Geerlings, Eric Mendelsohn, Antonin Raymond, Walter Gropius, Konrad Wachsmann, Arthur Korn, Felix James Samuely, E. S. Richter, Paul Zucker, Hans Knoll, Albert Kahn, Ludwig Hilberseimer, George Hartmueller, I. M. Pei, Erwin Panofsky, Paul Frankl, and Kurt Weitzmann—within the setting of the modern movement, and evaluates the historic obscurity of the wartime landscapes against the collective human moment that was Dresden.
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Washburn, Chad E. "Conservation of Water Resources in a Botanic Garden." Journal of Zoological and Botanical Gardens 5, no. 2 (April 8, 2024): 131–42. http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/jzbg5020009.

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Water-resource challenges, encompassing both quality and quantity, pose significant threats to Florida’s ecosystems, especially in the face of climate change, rising sea levels, and rapid urbanization. This paper explores the innovative stormwater-management system implemented at Naples Botanical Garden as a model for addressing these challenges. The Garden’s approach, treating stormwater as a valuable resource, involves dry and wet retention areas, created lakes, and a unique River of Grass, mimicking natural ecosystems. This system not only mitigates flooding, but also effectively removes pollutants, recharges the aquifer, and provides a habitat for diverse wildlife. The paper emphasizes the economic, environmental, and social impacts of traditional stormwater-management practices in Florida. Naples Botanical Garden’s case serves as a guide for botanical gardens and zoos globally, showcasing the pivotal role these institutions can play in sustainable water-resource management. The collaborative design process involving landscape architects, engineers, and horticulturists ensures a holistic and aesthetically pleasing approach to stormwater management. The paper underscores the role of botanical gardens in promoting nature-based solutions, educating the public, and offering tangible steps for implementing similar systems worldwide. It can help guide regional adaptation strategies to manage stormwater as a resource.
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Witt, M. L., W. M. Fountain, R. L. Geneve, and D. L. Olszowy. "Partnering of U.K. and Kentucky Division of Forestry in Woody Plant Education." HortScience 32, no. 3 (June 1997): 492E—493. http://dx.doi.org/10.21273/hortsci.32.3.492e.

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America the Beautiful and Urban and Community Forestry grant programs, part of the expanded Forestry Title of the 1990 Farm Bill, authorized funding to encourage citizen involvement in creating and supporting long-term and sustained urban and community forestry programs. U.K. Woody Ornamental scientists and the KY Division of Forestry Urban Forestry Coordinator planned and implemented the following educational programs to this end: 1) comprehensive training manual on Managing Trees in the Urban Environment, including a guide for the care and protection of trees, grant application, and managing of volunteers; 2) three publications on small, medium-sized, and large trees for urban spaces; 3) interactive hypertext version of tree selector publications; 4) statewide workshops on Trees in Communities; 5) annual statewide Urban Forestry Short Course; 5) Plant Health Care and Hazard Trees workshops for arborists. The comprehensive program brings city planners, government personnel, public work's personnel, arborists, builders and developers, horticulturists and landscape architects, tree board members, homeowners' associations, Master Gardeners, and other community volunteers together to support quality programming for preservation and enhancement of valuable natural resource of trees.
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Hall, Charles R., Alan W. Hodges, and Marco A. Palma. "Sales, Trade Flows and Marketing Practices within the U.S. Nursery Industry." Journal of Environmental Horticulture 29, no. 1 (March 1, 2011): 14–24. http://dx.doi.org/10.24266/0738-2898-29.1.14.

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Abstract This article provides an overview of marketing and production practices of the U.S. nursery and greenhouse industry in 2008, based on information collected through the 2009 National Nursery Survey, the fifth such survey since 1988. Lists of nursery firms for each state were assembled from the respective Department of Agriculture (Plant Health Board) offices responsible for licensing nursery producers. The compiled state lists resulted in a combined listing of 38,000 certified nursery operations. A total of 3,044 usable questionnaires were returned from a sample of 17,019 firms for an effective 17.9 % response rate. The survey was administered through both mail and internet questionnaires, with repeated contacts attempted, and a follow-up telephone survey on non-respondents. Survey respondents reported total annual sales of $4.45 billion in 2008, or an average of $1.73 million per firm, and total employment of 48,833 permanent and temporary jobs. Based on an adjusted population of validated active firms (19,803), total U.S. nursery industry sales were estimated at $27.14 billion, and total employment was estimated at 262,941 jobs. The highest sales and employment were in the Pacific and Southeast regions, led by the states of California and Florida. Overall, 77 percent of sales were made through wholesale outlets including landscape firms, single-location garden centers, and re-wholesalers.
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Sgoutas, Vassilis. "What could be considered a successful city of tomorrow." Ekistics and The New Habitat 69, no. 415-417 (December 1, 2002): 345–46. http://dx.doi.org/10.53910/26531313-e200269415-417362.

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The author, an architect, is currently President of the International Union of Architects (UIA) and has played an active part in the variousactivities of the Union as a member of the UIA Council between 1985 and 1990, then Vice President for Region II from 1990 to 1993 and Secretary General from 1993 to 1999. Born in Athens (Greece), Vassilis Sgoutas graduated from the University of Cape Town in 1957 and has his own practice in Athens. Projects carried out both in Greece and the Middle East include public buildings, industrial architecture, commercial buildings, hospitals, rehabilitation centers, restoration work and landscape architecture. He has won numerous awards in competitions including 2 of 30 ex-aequo prizes awarded by the Greek Ministry of Public Works for the best buildings of the period 1973-1983 and the Ministry of Environment ex-aequo award for innovative housing. He was President of the Greek Section of the UIA from 1981 to 1993 and has been a representative Council Member of the Technical Chamber of Greece (TEE) since 1984. He is actively involved in matters related to the environment and the disabled. He was a member of the EEC Helios Committee for the Handicapped (1989-1993); member of the Experts Committee for the "European Manual for an Accessible Built Environment" (1990) and the "European Concept for Access" (1995). He is a Board member of the Athens Forest Association and the Greek Spastics Society and a member of the World Society for Ekistics (WSE). The text that follows is an edited and revised version of an address by the author in his capacity as President of UIA to the annual General Assembly of the WSE following the WSE Symposion "Defining Success of the City in the 21st century," Berlin, 24-28 October, 2001.
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Books on the topic "Florida. Board of Landscape Architects"

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Services, Maryland General Assembly Dept of Fiscal. Sunset review evaluation, State Board of Examiners of Landscape Architects. Annapolis, Md. (90 State Cir., Annapolis 21401-1991): The Department, 1991.

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2

Florida. Legislature. Senate. Economic, Community, and Consumer Affairs Committee., ed. A Review of chapter 481, part II, Florida statutes: Landscape architecture. [Tallahassee]: The Committee, 1987.

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Kansas. State Board of Technical Professions., ed. Kansas State Board of Technical Professions: Statutes effective January 1, 1995 and rules and regulations effective March 1, 1996. Topeka, KS (900 SW Jackson, Ste. 507, Topeka 66612-1257): The Board, 1996.

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Kansas. State Board of Technical Professions., ed. Kansas State Board of Technical Professions: Statutes effective January 1, 1993 and rules and regulations effective February 13, 1995. Topeka, KS (900 SW Jackson, Ste. 507, Topeka 66612-1257): The Board, 1995.

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Virginia. Board for Professional and Occupational Regulation. Need for licensing landscape architects: Report of the Department of Professional and Occupational Regulation, Board for Professional and Occupational Regulation to the Governor and the General Assembly of Virginia. Richmond: Commonwealth of Virginia, 2000.

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Affairs, California Dept of Consumer. The administration's recommendations for the Sunset review of Board of Accountancy, California State Athletic Commission, Board of Barbering and Cosmetology, Cemetery Board, Board of Funeral Directors and Embalmers, Court Reporters Board of California, Board of Registration for Geologists and Geophysicists, State Board of Guide Dogs for the Blind, Interior Design Certification Program, Board of Landscape Architects: Report to the California legislature. Sacramento, Calif: The Dept., 1996.

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Auditor, Hawaii Legislature Office of the Legislative. Sunset evaluation report.: A report to the governor and the Legislature of the state of Hawaii. Honolulu, Hawaii: The Auditor, 1988.

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Auditor, Hawaii Legislature Office of the Legislative. Sunset evaluation report.: A report to the Governor and the Legislature of the State of Hawaii. [Honolulu]: The Auditor, 1986.

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Auditor, Hawaii Legislature Office of the Legislative. Sunset evaluation report.: A report to the Governor and the Legislature of the State of Hawaii. Honolulu, Hawaii (465 S. King St., Suite 500, Honolulu 96813): The Auditor, 1992.

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Auditor, Hawaii Legislature Office of the Legislative. Sunset evaluation report.: A report to the governor and the Legislature of the State of Hawaii. [Honolulu, Hawaii] (465 S. King St., Honolulu 96813): The Auditor, 1986.

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Book chapters on the topic "Florida. Board of Landscape Architects"

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Mullins, Anne. "On-Reservation Projects and the Tribal Historic Preservation Office’s Role within Tribal Government." In We Come for Good. University Press of Florida, 2017. http://dx.doi.org/10.5744/florida/9780813062280.003.0005.

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The Seminole Tribe of Florida reservation system consists of five geographically dispersed parcels of land that are spread out across the length and breadth of South Florida. These lands, held in trust by the U.S. government, give the Seminole Tribe of Florida the unenviable distinction of being the most geographically dispersed of any federally recognized tribal entity residing in North America. The on-reservation project cultural-review process undertaken by the THPO is central to three of its four component sections: Tribal archaeology, collections, and archaeometry. Working closely with a group of local reservation-based cultural advisors (preservation review board), the on-reservation cultural-review process holistically encompasses both the tangible and intangible when considering a determination of effect under the Tribal Cultural Resources Ordinance. It is important to note that some tangible resources, like medicinal plants, move across the landscape. It is therefore vital that determinations represent the result of an ongoing dialogue with the community. Working at the reservation scale this is a possibility that might not be practically achievable at the state or national level.
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