Applications are open for ASLA’s new seven-month, cohort-based program designed to help you transition from designer to firm owner/leader—complete with mentorship, a business plan capstone, and FREE ...
Global climate change is the defining environmental issue of our time. From devastating wildfires to historic storms and rising seas, the effects are already being felt and will continue to get worse.
Landscape architects bring together ecology, design, and technology to create places that are healthy beautiful, and built to last. ... We collaborate with communities, engineers, architects, and ...
The Cultural Crossing project is a place of inspired intercultural exchange and dynamic hands-on learning. While the project is an expansion of the existing Portland Japanese Garden, already a ...
ASLA has extended the 2026 Student Awards registration and submission deadlines in response to educator feedback. Here are the updated dates, key eligibility rules, and the submission details students ...
In response to the recent increase in immigration enforcement activities, the Illinois, New York Upstate, and Northern California ASLA chapters, in partnership with El Merequetengue (the network of ...
We’re thrilled to announce that the call for presentations for the ASLA 2026 Conference on Landscape Architecture, taking place in Los Angeles, September 16–18, 2026, is now open! The countdown is on!
If the future of the planet involves high-rise living, there is also a need for elevated green spaces to counteract congestion with verdant, air-purifying sky gardens that allow infill buildings to ...
Rising waters and sinking land are the story of Parsons Island in the mid-Atlantic Chesapeake Bay: mapped in 1685 as a 447-acre island, it is today a mere 77 acres, with relative annual sea-level rise ...
Cape Cod in Massachusetts boasts whole communities of residences designed by Bauhaus and modernist architects from midcentury Harvard faculty, yet most of them are simply placed within relatively ...
The United States is still recovering from urban renewal decisions to prioritize highways over communities, resulting in neighborhoods—primarily occupied by residents of color—that have been ...
The West Philadelphia Landscape Project (WPLP) has been in progress since 1987, with a phased approach that first established a framework for action, then began to implement it over subsequent decades ...