Academic literature on the topic 'Landscape design'

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Journal articles on the topic "Landscape design"

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樊, 倩. "Landscape Design and Traditional Villages: Historical Heritage and Landscape Preservation." Design 09, no. 01 (2024): 1270–76. http://dx.doi.org/10.12677/design.2024.91153.

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赵, 学强. "Landscape Renewal and Design Transformation of Yunjinhu Park in Jinan—Landscape Design of Ecological Trail." Design 09, no. 02 (2024): 716–25. http://dx.doi.org/10.12677/design.2024.92264.

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Behe, B., J. Hardy, S. Barton, J. Brooker, T. Fernandez, C. Hall, J. Hicks, et al. "Landscape Plant Material, Size, and Design Sophistication Increase Perceived Home Value." Journal of Environmental Horticulture 23, no. 3 (September 1, 2005): 127–33. http://dx.doi.org/10.24266/0738-2898-23.3.127.

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Abstract Little consumer research is available to help landscape design and installation businesses develop service marketing strategies. We investigated the effect of three components of a landscape design on the perceived value of a home. This information would be useful in marketing lawn and landscape services to prospective clients. Our objective was to provide a consumer perspective on the value of the components in a ‘good’ landscape and determine which attributes of a landscape consumers valued most. Using conjoint design, 1323 volunteer participants in seven states viewed 16 photographs that depicted the front of a landscaped residence. Landscapes were constructed using various levels of three attributes: plant material type, design sophistication, and plant size. Results showed that the relative importance increased from plant material type to plant size to design sophistication. Across all seven markets, study participants perceived that home value increased from 5% to 11% for homes with a good landscape.
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Peterson, Cathleen A., L. Brooke McDowell, and Chris A. Martin. "286 Plant Life Form Frequency, Diversity, and Irrigation Application in Urban Residential Landscapes." HortScience 34, no. 3 (June 1999): 491E—491. http://dx.doi.org/10.21273/hortsci.34.3.491e.

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Heightened awareness of ecological concerns have prompted many municipalities to promote water conservation through landscape design. In central Arizona, urban residential landscapes containing desert-adapted plant species are termed xeriscapes, while those containing temperate or tropical species and turf are termed mesoscapes. Research was conducted to ascertain landscape plant species diversity, tree, shrub, and ground cover frequency; landscape canopy area coverage; and monthly irrigation application volumes for xeric and mesic urban residential landscapes. The residential urban landscapes were located in Tempe and Phoenix, Ariz., and all were installed initially between 1985 and 1995. Although species composition of xeric and mesic landscapes was generally dissimilar, both landscape types had comparable species diversity. Mesoscapes had significantly more trees and shrubs and about 2.3 times more canopy area coverage per landscaped area than xeriscapes. Monthly irrigation application volumes per landscaped surface area were higher for xeriscapes. Even though human preference for xeric landscape plants may be ecological in principle, use of desert-adapted species in central Arizona urban residential landscape settings might not result in less landscape water use compared with mesic landscapes.
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Liao, Qi Peng. "On Modern Landscape Design Integrating Chinese Traditional Spiritual Culture." Advanced Materials Research 368-373 (October 2011): 3414–17. http://dx.doi.org/10.4028/www.scientific.net/amr.368-373.3414.

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Chinese concept of landscape design originates from Chinese traditional culture, which is based on the basic framework integrating Confucianism, Taoism and Buddhism and embodied in the design of many classic ancient landscapes. However, spiritual culture is seriously missing in Chinese modern landscape construction, which affects landscape design and shaping. It is urgent to restore spiritual culture in modern landscape design. The development of landscape design shall give more priority to the harmony of human, culture and the nature, and emphasize Chinese spiritual culture in modern landscape design. Only those landscape designs that embody the connotation of Chinese spiritual culture can have real vitality, and only those designs that embody the features of Chinese spiritual culture can actually give people spiritual comfort and a sense of belonging. Giving priority to creating and presenting spiritual culture and images of Chinese landscape and seeking for landscape designs that present Chinese features is the path for innovative development of Chinese landscape design.
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Komali, Uppada, and Rajesh CVS. "Analysis of Computer Aided Design Employed in Landscape Design." International Journal of Trend in Scientific Research and Development Volume-2, Issue-5 (August 31, 2018): 1931–36. http://dx.doi.org/10.31142/ijtsrd18230.

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冯, 志远. "Research on Spatial Landscape Enhancement Strategy under the Bridge from the Perspective of Landscape Urbanism." Design 08, no. 04 (2023): 3437–42. http://dx.doi.org/10.12677/design.2023.84423.

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朱, 琳霄. "Multi-Dimensional Integrated Landscape Design Based on Landscape Toughness Enhancement—Taking Dongping Lake for Example." Design 08, no. 04 (2023): 4207–15. http://dx.doi.org/10.12677/design.2023.84513.

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Despot, Katerina, and Vaska Sandeva. "Avant-Garde Movement in Landscape Design." International Journal of Art and Design 1, no. 1 (June 2024): 1–11. http://dx.doi.org/10.69648/wcyc4975.

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The avant-garde movement in landscape design is an expression of revolutionary and innovative approach to creation of spatial solutions. This movement uses different artistic techniques, shapes, colors and materials to create interesting and unique landscapes. Landscape design refers to the profession that deals with creation of spatial solutions for open spatial concepts of parks and gardens. The avant-garde movement creates dynamics with art techniques where they produce revolutionary landscapes. Landscape designers have an obligation to subtly educate society about the values of creating striking and intuitive work. It is important for the designer to have something to say in his expression. Developing the concept of design that tends to become innovation is of great importance. The more the concept for landscape design is innovative, the greater are the chances for better innovative visual interpretation. Success in interpreting the concept in the work, largely depends on the talent of the designer.
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Morris, Robert L., and Angela O'Callaghan*. "Landscape Retrofit: Redesigning Desert Landscapes." HortScience 39, no. 4 (July 2004): 839A—839. http://dx.doi.org/10.21273/hortsci.39.4.839a.

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The Las Vegas Valley receives most of its water from the Colorado River due to a static federal water allocation the remainder from pumping groundwater. The increased water demand due to the population rise in the Las Vegas Valley is expected to overtake its current water allocation in the next few years. Over 60% of the potable water used in the Las Vegas valley is used to irrigate urban landscapes. Poorly designed desert landscapes can ultimately use more water than traditional landscapes and increase residential energy costs. Most of the desert landscaping currently installed by homeowners either ignores principles that conserve water or conserve energy. The program was designed to be used with homeowner associations and commercial landscapers. The residential homeowner proved to be the most responsive to this type of program. The overall goal of this program is to teach residents how to convert a high water use landscape to lower water use and reduce dependence on potable water for irrigation and still maintain high quality landscapes. In 1995, a 7-week, hands-on, landscape design curriculum was developed and used to teach homeowners how to create desert landscape designs that conserve water and energy and compared its water use to traditional, turfgrass landscapes. Participants leave the course with a finished design of their making with information on how to install the landscape themselves or how to hire a professional to do the installation. In 1996-97 a Master Gardener was taught and mentored how to teach the class in Las Vegas using the existing curriculum. Since 1995, over 500 residents have been trained and water use savings documented by the existing water purveyors. This program is self-funded through class fees.
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Dissertations / Theses on the topic "Landscape design"

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Ashby, Linda. "The Biocentric Landscape Architect: Designing the Public Landscape, Benefiting the Natural World." Thesis, Virginia Tech, 2005. http://hdl.handle.net/10919/31745.

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Owing to the authorâ s interest in and concern for earthâ s processes, healthy ecosystems, and environmental decline and devastation, this thesis examines the human â nature relationship, as it relates to landscape architecture, through spiritual, mathematical, geometrical, historical, economical, ecological, philosophical and ethical perspectives. Sustainable design and eco-revelatory design methods are also explored in order to aid in the development of a personal design ethic that defines and produces ecologically responsible works of landscape architecture. The goal is to establish a personal framework for design that results in built landscapes that are ecologically more benign, holistically more functional, and culturally more significant than standard practices.

Research methodologies include literature review, case study analysis, project site analysis, and personal interviews. Findings suggest that despite a longstanding and growing call for a more harmonious relationship between nature and anthropogenic changes on the land, the green movement remains a loosely defined alternative undercurrent. The field of landscape architecture is uniquely poised to be a leader in the sustainable revolution; this is especially true when its practitioners, researchers and theorists are dedicated to ideals and activities that bring about true ecological value. For the individual designer, the experience of developing and committing to a personal design ethic can be empowering, and can produce work that has more mettle, veracity and purpose than the designer has previously known.
Master of Landscape Architecture

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Boelt, Robin Wiatt. "Passive Solar Landscape Design: Its Impact on Fossil Fuel Consumption Through Landscape Design." Thesis, Virginia Tech, 2006. http://hdl.handle.net/10919/32146.

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Gas, electricity, heating and cooling buildings - comfort â our lives revolve around fossil fuels. Technology and the demands of living in todayâ s society add to our gigantic fossil fuel appetite. With gas prices topping three dollars per gallon, changes must be made. This thesis project presents an analysis of passive solar landscape design (PSLD) principles used to create microclimates within the landscape, and thereby increasing human comfort both indoors and outdoors. The analysis includes case study results of fossil fuel consumption and PSLD implementation. Microclimatic comfort is revealed in the design of a solar park in historic Smithfield, Virginia. Smithfield Solar Park is designed with PSLD principles to be self-sustaining - the Farmerâ s Market pavilions and educational center generating their own electricity through a solar voltaic system. This system is enhanced by careful siting and selection of trees, shrubs and built structures and use of local materials to reduce transportation distances. Smithfield Solar Park features a Farmerâ s Market, outdoor movies and Friday Cheers, and will host regional and local festivals and events, enhancing tourism and the economy of Smithfieldâ s Historic District. Landscape architecture stands in prime position to improve landscapes and lessen both our dependency on and consumption of fossil fuels through implementation of PSLD principles. Public education about the benefits of implementing PSLD principles can have local, regional, national and global effects on our fuel consumption.
Master of Landscape Architecture
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Prokopenko, S. V. "Modern trends of landscape design." Thesis, Київський національний університет технологій та дизайну, 2018. https://er.knutd.edu.ua/handle/123456789/11389.

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Daley, Mark (Mark S. ). "Landscape boogie-woogie." Thesis, Massachusetts Institute of Technology, 1991. http://hdl.handle.net/1721.1/79023.

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Thesis (M.S.)--Massachusetts Institute of Technology, Dept. of Architecture, 1991.
Odd-number pages numbered; even number pages blank. Pages 170 and 171 blank.
Includes bibliographical references.
The intent of this work was to explore an additive working method as a way to generate building form. It was initiated without any preconceived ideas about the project's final outcome. Instead, it focused on observations, associations, and attitudes of existing experiences and information. Working from the position that "one perception must immediately and directly lead to a further perception," a decisions were made. The design of an elementary school was the vehicle for the process.
by Mark Daley.
M.S.
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Milette, Nicole. "Landscape-painter as landscape-gardener : the case of Alfred Parsons R.A." Thesis, University of York, 1997. http://etheses.whiterose.ac.uk/2530/.

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Hays, Dan. "Screen as landscape." Thesis, Kingston University, 2012. http://eprints.kingston.ac.uk/24599/.

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People have become accustomed to living with - and inside of - the media screen. Not just in the cinema or living room, but more pervasively with mobile telephones, advertising hoardings, and computer interfaces. It has infiltrated the art gallery, its high definition, contrast ratio and immersive scale tending to blind the audience to its mediating presence. And what about the genre of landscape today, beyond the latest BBC wildlife spectacular, computer simulated Hollywood blockbuster, video game or Google Earth? As the screen populates the cultural landscape, and increasingly mediates between the actual landscape and humanity, where are the points of contemporary artistic reflection on - or resistance to - the screen's increasing ubiquity and transparency? The thesis comprises three components to be taken as a whole: Screen as landscape, an exhibition of seven paintings; Touch screen, documenting the development of practical research; and Screen as Landscape, a dissertation examining contemporary artworks across a diversity of media, including film, photography, printmaking, painting, and computer-generated imagery. Supplementing these, a Guide book offers an overview of the thesis: its origins in an established practice; its developing themes and research methods, emerging out of making and writing; its resolution into three interrelated parts; and its distinctiveness within a range of recent curatorial projects. Echoing the landscape theme, the thesis takes a journeying form rather than being fixed in a specific geographic, art-historical, or theoretical situation. Landscape is salvaged as a live genre for visual art, as a web of interrelated perceptual and symbolic forms that are insistently present. This is despite landscape's annexation as an art-historical anachronism after Post-Impressionism, ripe for nostalgia and parody; its default appearance as seamless photographed or simulated backdrop to fantasies of wilderness and escape; or as a cartographic plane for the projection of information and ideas of control, containment, or exploitation. Landscape is an idea born of familiarity and estrangement, with which artistic interventions with screen technology can actually offer insights. Through its apparatuses - its obstructive lenses and artificial surfaces - the screen can reveal forms of imaging analogous to - yet not identical with - the perceptual and cultural formation of landscape, between experiences of nearness and distance, presence and absence, discovery and loss. Screen as landscape proposes an inter-medial approach, describing a field of contemporary concerns with potent art-historical resonances, harbouring essential questions about human subjectivity in the face of the screen's replacement of landscape with depthless surfaces. For the screen interface threatens subjectivity through the fluid integration of perspectival viewpoints, textual or graphical information, and networked interconnectivity. Through the immediacy of spatial and temporal proximities, and the replacement of physical location by virtual access points, the dimension of depth is increasingly lost to perception. The screen must be landscaped to counter the screening of the landscape - the supplanting of atmospheric, ambiguous, and multisensory encounter. Against the backdrop of cyberspace, it fathomless depths and infinity of virtual frames, Screen as landscape performs a bold or foolhardy attempt on the sheer, inhuman edifice of the screen.
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Huang, Zhaoheng. "Landscape plants in architectural design." Virtual Press, 1992. http://liblink.bsu.edu/uhtbin/catkey/845986.

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This creative project has explored the design methods to integrate landscape planting materials and architectural elements. A demonstrative architectural design is proposed to apply these research methods. This report comprises two major sections: one is the description of landscape materials and their characteristics; the other is an architectural design to demonstrate the usage of these landscape materials. The first section of this report has emphasized on an inventory of landscape materials with the descriptions of their individual functions and characteristics in architectural design as well as the samples of those landscape elements in spatial organization. About 40 most popular plant materials were collected and their growing patterns and spatial geometries were integrated in various building typology. The case study has demonstrated the practical application of those landscape materials. The cultural and aesthetic values of plant materials were evaluated according to the cultural and historical background of selected prominent landscape designs. In the second section, a creative architectural design was developed based on a proposed Tree Museum located in Muncie, Indiana. The objective of this design was to apply the design principals developed in previous research, and to demonstrate how the landscape materials could be properly integrated with architectural design. As a trial approach, the tree museum has presented a unique perspective of architectural design in which the organizations of both building structures and plant elements are highly implemented.
Department of Architecture
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Al-Mutawa, Yasmin Abdullah Abdullatif 1963. "Landscape design guidelines for Kuwait." Thesis, The University of Arizona, 1993. http://hdl.handle.net/10150/291619.

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Prior to the Iraqi invasion and occupation, there was limited landscaping in Kuwait. Public gardens, highways, streets, governmental and private buildings had been planted to some extent. In the post invasion days the Amir of Kuwait has set a goal to beautify Kuwait by intensified landscaping. Responsibility for this Plan was given to the Public Authority for Agriculture and Fisheries (PAAF) which in turn, commissioned the Kuwait Institute for Scientific Research (KISR) to develop the Plan, in collaboration with PAAF staff. Currently, a Strategic and Master Plan for "Greenery" Development (1995-2010) is being prepared. The plan will consist of guidelines for the gradual landscaping of Kuwait focusing on the urban areas. The objectives of this thesis is to ensure the development of guidelines into a comprehensive body of knowledge which takes these categories into consideration: sociocultural factors, functional factors, environmental/ecological factors and aesthetic factors. It is hoped that this information could be synthesized into a thoughtful, utilitarian landscape design guideline for Kuwait.
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Zhou, Yukun. "LANDSCAPE INTEGRATION IN URBAN CONTEXT : Landscape Regeneration of Slakthusområdet." Thesis, KTH, Stadsbyggnad, 2012. http://urn.kb.se/resolve?urn=urn:nbn:se:kth:diva-98696.

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Taking as a starting point the theory and concept of Landscape Urbanism, this thesis project explores an alternative solution for the regeneration of old industrial areas using a case study: the design of Slakthusområdet in Stockholm. The project focuses on how to use landscape as a medium to transform Slakthusområdet into a sustainable, attractive, and people friendly area. And at the same time integrate it into a wider urban context. It covers two aspects: First, the integration of the site in the surrounding green network. Second, the regeneration of the green infrastructure inside of the site that could add ecological and social values to the site.
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Lau, Yau-yee Patty. "Restoration of Centre Street the integration of universal design to a landscaped connection /." Click to view the E-thesis via HKUTO, 2009. http://sunzi.lib.hku.hk/hkuto/record/B4308560X.

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Books on the topic "Landscape design"

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David, Nagarajupalli Mesa. Landscape design. Nigeria: Archimedia Publishing, 2009.

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Books, Ortho, ed. Landscape design. San Ramon, Calif: Ortho Books, 1996.

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Ueyama, Ryoko. Landscape design. Tokyo: Bijutsu Shuppan-Sha, 2007.

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Flannery, John A., and Karen M. Smith. Eco-Landscape Design. Cham: Springer International Publishing, 2015. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-3-319-07206-7.

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Capolongo, Stefano, Monica Botta, and Andrea Rebecchi, eds. Therapeutic Landscape Design. Cham: Springer International Publishing, 2023. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-3-031-09439-2.

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Ken, Fieldhouse, and Dodd Jeremy, eds. Landscape design guide. Aldershot, Hants, England: Gower Technical, 1990.

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1946-, Adams Ian, ed. Midwest landscape design. Dallas, Tex: Taylor Pub. Co., 1999.

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George, Lam, ed. Landscape design: USA. [Barcelona, Spain]: Links Internacional, 2007.

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F, Collins John. Livable landscape design. [Ithaca, N.Y.]: Cornell University, 1988.

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Lee, Yun-jung. Landscape design: Park. Seoul: Archiworld, 2006.

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Book chapters on the topic "Landscape design"

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Haase, Dagmar. "Landscape landscape Planning landscape planning /Design of Shrinking landscape shrinking Landscapes." In Encyclopedia of Sustainability Science and Technology, 5835–55. New York, NY: Springer New York, 2012. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-1-4419-0851-3_213.

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Haase, Dagmar. "Landscape landscape Planning landscape planning /Design of Shrinking landscape shrinking Landscapes." In Sustainable Built Environments, 373–93. New York, NY: Springer New York, 2013. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-1-4614-5828-9_213.

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Petrasova, Anna, Brendan Harmon, Vaclav Petras, Payam Tabrizian, and Helena Mitasova. "Landscape Design." In Tangible Modeling with Open Source GIS, 173–83. Cham: Springer International Publishing, 2018. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-3-319-89303-7_14.

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Herrington, Susan. "Landscape design." In The Routledge Companion to Landscape Studies, 487–98. Second edition. | Milton Park, Abingdon, Oxon ; New York : Routledge, 2018.: Routledge, 2018. http://dx.doi.org/10.4324/9781315195063-39.

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Sinico, M. "Landscape. Expressive Landscapes, Perception and Design." In Springer Series in Design and Innovation, 81–91. Cham: Springer International Publishing, 2020. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-3-030-45566-8_6.

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Banathy, Bela H. "The Design Landscape." In Contemporary Systems Thinking, 87–152. Boston, MA: Springer US, 1996. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-1-4757-9981-1_4.

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Murphy, Michael D. "Design Thinking." In Landscape Architecture Theory, 263–77. Washington, DC: Island Press/Center for Resource Economics, 2016. http://dx.doi.org/10.5822/978-1-61091-751-3_10.

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Murphy, Michael D. "Design Purpose." In Landscape Architecture Theory, 133–48. Washington, DC: Island Press/Center for Resource Economics, 2016. http://dx.doi.org/10.5822/978-1-61091-751-3_5.

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Murphy, Michael D. "Design Form." In Landscape Architecture Theory, 149–81. Washington, DC: Island Press/Center for Resource Economics, 2016. http://dx.doi.org/10.5822/978-1-61091-751-3_6.

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Murphy, Michael D. "Design Process." In Landscape Architecture Theory, 185–215. Washington, DC: Island Press/Center for Resource Economics, 2016. http://dx.doi.org/10.5822/978-1-61091-751-3_7.

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Conference papers on the topic "Landscape design"

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Chernetskaya, E. I., and A. G. Lukyanchuk. "LANDSCAPE THERAPY AS A MODERN METHOD OF LANDSCAPE DESIGN." In SAKHAROV READINGS 2021: ENVIRONMENTAL PROBLEMS OF THE XXI CENTURY. International Sakharov Environmental Institute, 2021. http://dx.doi.org/10.46646/sakh-2021-1-18-21.

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Landscape therapy is a method of spa therapy aimed at improving the health of the body by the influence of the beauty of nature, landscapes and therapeutic walks. Scientific studies show that unity with nature helps to reduce the level of anxiety, relieve stress, and even reduce high blood pressure. Contemplation of the beauty of nature stimulates the vitality and calms the nervous system, provides positive emotions. The article provides an overview of the use of medical gardens to improve the health of people in the countries of Europe and the East. The necessity of landscape therapy on the territory of Belarus is also justified.
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Vasiliev, Denis, Richard Hazlett, Rodney Stevens, and Lennart Bornmalm. "LANDSCAPE DESIGN AND NATURE-BASED SOLUTIONS: POTENTIAL FOR INTEGRATION." In 22nd SGEM International Multidisciplinary Scientific GeoConference 2022. STEF92 Technology, 2022. http://dx.doi.org/10.5593/sgem2022v/6.2/s27.73.

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Nature-based Solutions is an umbrella concept, gaining traction in recent years. It implies working with nature in order to simultaneously address multiple challenges humanity faces today, including biodiversity loss, climate change, food and energy insecurity. Nature-based Solutions are being applied across landscape types, including urban, rural, forest and protected areas. Combining nature-based solutions with landscape design, however, has predominantly been considered in cities. However, there is a great potential of combining implementation of Nature-based Solutions with landscape design in other landscapes, too. The experience from the urban Nature-based Solutions creates a great opportunity for analyzing potential of application of landscape design in other settings. The approach is likely to provide a range of benefits and increase support for the Nature-based Solution projects from the general society. It is also likely to increase attractiveness of the projects for investors, which in turn may contribute to wider application of nature-based solutions. Here we review this experience and propose potential solutions that might be implemented in landscapes other than urban ones.
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Wang, Tan, Jiajia Li, Yufan Ding, Xiaoyu Ming, and Xiaofang Yu. "Landscape Language of Modern Swedish Landscape Architects." In 4th International Conference on Arts, Design and Contemporary Education (ICADCE 2018). Paris, France: Atlantis Press, 2018. http://dx.doi.org/10.2991/icadce-18.2018.40.

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CODRESCU, ION. "LANDSCAPE CONFIGURATIONS." In SGEM 2014 Scientific SubConference on ARTS, PERFORMING ARTS, ARCHITECTURE AND DESIGN. Stef92 Technology, 2014. http://dx.doi.org/10.5593/sgemsocial2014/b41/s13.020.

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Shakhbazova, F. "GEOPLASTICS IN LANDSCAPE DESIGN." In Reproduction, monitoring and protection of natural, natural-anthropogenic and anthropogenic landscapes. FSBE Institution of Higher Education Voronezh State University of Forestry and Technologies named after G.F. Morozov, 2022. http://dx.doi.org/10.34220/rmpnnaal2021_131-136.

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In this article, the author considers the principles and technologies of such a direction of landscape design as geoplastics in the urban environment, its features, techniques, as well as the prevalence and trends in the world. The features of terracing slopes with the use of retaining walls are revealed; techniques for creating patio structures in the conditions of pits and recesses are studied; creating a natural environment on the original game structures; improving the microclimate with the use of structures – artificial hills.
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Jiangwen Huang. "Landscape design of urban waterfront." In Conceptual Design (CAID/CD). IEEE, 2008. http://dx.doi.org/10.1109/caidcd.2008.4730769.

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Ning, Tao. "Landscape Accessories in the Landscape Design of the Environmental Art." In 2014 Conference on Informatisation in Education, Management and Business (IEMB-14). Paris, France: Atlantis Press, 2014. http://dx.doi.org/10.2991/iemb-14.2014.87.

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Dagenais, D. "Designing with nature in landscape architecture." In DESIGN AND NATURE 2008. Southampton, UK: WIT Press, 2008. http://dx.doi.org/10.2495/dn080221.

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Nikezic, A., and N. Jankovic. "Kosutnjak: landscape as a learning system." In DESIGN AND NATURE 2012. Southampton, UK: WIT Press, 2012. http://dx.doi.org/10.2495/dn120061.

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Zhang, Jun, Qiu-wen Shi, and Ning Wu. "Ecological art research on landscape architecture." In 2009 IEEE 10th International Conference on Computer-Aided Industrial Design & Conceptual Design. IEEE, 2009. http://dx.doi.org/10.1109/caidcd.2009.5374890.

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Reports on the topic "Landscape design"

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Bonnot, Thomas W., D. Todd Jones-Farrand, Frank R. Thompson, Joshua J. Millspaugh, Jane A. Fitzgerald, Nate Muenks, Phillip Hanberry, et al. Developing a decision-support process for landscape conservation design. Newtown Square, PA: U.S. Department of Agriculture, Forest Service, Northern Research Station, 2019. http://dx.doi.org/10.2737/nrs-gtr-190.

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Miller-Adams, Michelle, and Isabel McMullen. Promise Program Design for Equity Outcomes: A Landscape Survey. W.E. Upjohn Institute, May 2022. http://dx.doi.org/10.17848/wp22-366.

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de Vrieze, A. G. M., K. V. Koppelmäki, O. Morrow, and C. P. A. van Wagenberg. Circularity by design: governance landscape of the Metropolitan Region Amsterdam. IJmuiden: Wageningen Food & Biobased Research, 2022. http://dx.doi.org/10.18174/567976.

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Guo, Yuntao, Dustin Souders, Samuel Labi, Srinivas Peeta, and Irina Benedyk. Design of Urban Landscape and Road Networks to Accommodate CAVs. Purdue University, 2022. http://dx.doi.org/10.5703/1288284317468.

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Comer, Kevin, and Douglas Karlen. Enabling Sustainable Landscape Design for Continual Improvement of Operating Bioenergy Supply Systems. Office of Scientific and Technical Information (OSTI), February 2022. http://dx.doi.org/10.2172/1846013.

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P., Pacheco, Aguilar-Støen M., Borner J., Etter A., Putzel L., and Vera-Diaz M.D.C. Actors and landscape changes in tropical Latin America: challenges for REDD+ design and implementation. Center for International Forestry Research (CIFOR), 2010. http://dx.doi.org/10.17528/cifor/003274.

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Roelen, Keetie, Inka Barnett, Vicky Johnson, Tessa Lewin, Dorte Thorsen, and Giel Ton. Understanding Children’s Harmful Work: A Review of the Methodological Landscape. Institute of Development Studies (IDS), November 2020. http://dx.doi.org/10.19088/acha.2020.001.

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Children’s engagement with work has been widely researched using a wide variety of methods. However, the extent to which such methods and their combination provides insight into forms of children’s harmful work (CHW) is not obvious. This paper reviews and assesses respective opportunities and challenges of the main methods that have been used to study children’s engagement with work. It proposes research design principles and a methodological landscape for an integrated approach to child-centred, inclusive, and ethical research of CHW.
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Negri, M. Cristina, and H. Ssegane. Incorporating Bioenergy in Sustainable Landscape Designs Workshop Two: Agricultural Landscapes. Office of Scientific and Technical Information (OSTI), August 2015. http://dx.doi.org/10.2172/1220530.

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O'Connell, Kari, Kelly Hoke, and Roberta Nilson. Landscape Study of Undergraduate Field Experiences: Report from the Field on the Design, Outcomes, and Assessment of Undergraduate Field Experiences. Corvallis, OR: Oregon State University, 2018. http://dx.doi.org/10.5399/osu/1130.

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Calomeni, Alyssa, and Charles Theiling. Proceedings from the Soft Substrate Island Design Workshop. Engineer Research and Development Center (U.S.), October 2023. http://dx.doi.org/10.21079/11681/47721.

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This report summarizes the activities of the Soft Substrate Design Workshop held virtually on 08 September 2021. The 28 participants from federal, state, local, and academic organizations discussed designing and constructing islands with soft sediments in inland waterways. They were introduced to the US Army Corps of Engineers’ (USACE) Engineering With Nature® (EWN®) initiative and the vision for Tri-County Planning Commission (Peoria, Illinois). An overview of collaborative projects using landscape architecture and EWN principles was provided. The focus of discussion was on two primary waterways, the Upper Mississippi River System, and Illinois River. Participants discussed their experience associated with designing and constructing islands with and on soft sediments prior to breakout sessions to discuss specific design and contracting elements. The groups were brought together to discuss design techniques that could be implemented in the Upper Mississippi River and Illinois River systems.
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