The Master of Landscape Architecture is a professional/academic degree dealing with the shaping and management of landscapes. It is a program that is typically informed by architecture, planning, and design, and is usually housed in an architecture or design school.
A wide variety of specializations exist within the academic discipline of landscape architecture. Some of the most well-known areas are:
Urban design deals with the design of cities and towns. This field also involves the development of open public spaces, such as plazas and streetscapes. As urban designers, landscape architects set standards, development guidelines and create designs.
Regional landscape planning has emerged as a major area of practice for many landscape architects since the rise of environmentalism in the 1970s. In this field, landscape architects deal with the full range of planning and management of land and water, including natural resource surveys, creation and protection of habitats, wetlands, and other natural environments.
Park and recreation planning continues to be a mainstay of practice for many landscape architects involved in creating or redesigning parks, recreation and open space in cities, suburban and rural areas. Other landscape architects are involved with plans for golf courses, waterfront developments including marinas, and for large natural areas like provincial/national parks and forests.
Land development planning involves undeveloped land and provides a bridge between policy planning and individual development projects. Landscape architects working in this area have a knowledge of real estate economics and development regulation processes, as well as an understanding of the constraints of working with the land. Landscape architects often head multi-disciplinary project teams that integrate economic factors with good design to create quality environments for human use. =Ecology= Ecological planning and design studies the interaction between people and the natural environment and is concerned with the formulation of design policies, guidelines and plans to ensure the suitability of a site for development and to guide environmentally sound development, including bio-engineering practices.
Heritage conservation provides a link between past, present and future uses of land and historic sites. Landscape architects working in this area undertake historical research, analyze contemporary needs, and recommend stabilization, restoration, adaptation, and interpretation of landscapes to accommodate human use and ensure protection of cultural resources.
Consulting services, expert testimony, and facilitating project implementation including the approvals process and public participation are other areas of landscape architectural specialization.
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"Master of Landscape Architecture".
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