Dear FL|ASLA Members: |
By David Driapsa, ASLA If you will be attending the ASLA 2013 Annual Meeting & EXPO, you might be interested in experiencing the diversity of historic landscapes in and around Boston. For the faithful students of Frederick Law Olmsted, Boston is home to the great Emerald Necklace. In Brookline, is Fairsted, Olmsted’s home and studio. Other noteworthy historic landscapes within an easy walk of the Convention Center include the Boston Commons, the Boston Public Gardens, Copley Square, the Granary and King’s Chapel burial grounds. Mount Auburn Cemetery with its shaded dales and beautiful vistas of the City on a Hill is across the Charles River in Cambridge. Some noteworthy landscapes further afield may include, Walden Pond; the Revolutionary-era cities of Lexington, Concord and Lincoln; Minute Man National Historic Park, Concord Battleground, Louisa May Alcott’s Orchard House, Ralph Waldo Emerson’s home, as well as the Gropius House. Wellesley College is southwest of Boston. The Annual Meeting offers educational sessions and professional opportunities to learn about historic preservation. The Historic Preservation Professional Practice Network annual meeting will be held on Sunday, Nov. 17 at 3:15 p.m. The annual face-to-face HALS meeting will be held on Saturday, Nov. 16 at 5:15 p.m. The theme of the 2013 HALS challenge was "Documenting the Cultural Landscapes of Women." Awards will be given at the HALS meeting to recognize this year’s top three HALS submissions. On the EXPO floor, the HP-PPN and HALS will have exhibit tables. Please be sure to stop by. EDUCATIONAL SESSIONS RELATED TO HISTORIC PRESERVATION: FRI-A01 The Continuity of Change: Adapting and Interpreting Modernist Era Landscapes FRI-D06 Boston Through the Eyes of Landscape Architects FRI-D08 Solving the Congestion Crisis in America's National Parks SAT-A05 Capture, Create, and Convey with HD Laser Scanning and Other New 3D Technologies SUN-A05 Great Public Spaces: Philadelphia's Regional Foundation Creates a Public Space Fund MON-B07 Compelling Storytelling: Integrating Art, Information, and Landscape MON-B10 Boston Urban Wilds: Sustaining a Landmark Urban Ecology Program FIELD SESSIONS RELATED TO HISTORIC PRESERVATION: FS002 Sustainable Futures for Historic Properties: Estates in North Easton and Milton FS003 Landscape Cemeteries in the 21st Century and Contemporary Design Challenges FS005 The Emerald Necklace: Balancing the Past, the Present, and the Future FS006 New Campus Interventions at Wellesley and MIT FS014 Four Gardens of the Fenway FS016 The Past, Present, and Future of Harvard University Campus Spaces FS019 Boston from the Charles River can experience in and around Boston. There is surely something of historical landscape interest in Boston for everyone. |
By Ken Sussman, ASLA, RLA, LEED AP Mark your calendar!
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Sustainability ‘Collaborative Conversations’ Conference Panels Held This Summer Landscape architects and planners are concerned about protecting, creating and restoring sustainable environments, natural or man-made. Our professional organizations have established committees to focus on sustainability. What have these committees been doing and how does that work promote our professions as experts in sustainability? APAFL and FL ASLA have initiated a conversation about sustainability to collaborate and share what we are learning. This summer we also invited AIA FL and ULI FL to join us and talk about what they are doing on sustainability. We put together a panel of representatives from each organization for the 2013 FLASLA Annual Conference, July 18-20 in St. Petersburg and for the 2013 APA FL Conference, Sept. 11-13 in Orlando. The APA FL Sustainability Committee was created in March 2012. The chair of our committee is Brian Smith, FAICP (retired and former planning director for Pinellas County). Members include: Brian Smith, FAICP – Chair; Merle Bishop FAICP, Brent Lacey AICP, Cary Hayo AICP, Henry Bittaker AICP, Rosanna Cordova P.E. AICP LEED AP, Bob Massarelli, AICP, Rebecca Brightbill and Tim Center. The mission of the APAFL Sustainability Committee is to promote the integration of sustainability principles into planning policy and practice through relevant education and outreach. One of their projects is to put together a website clearinghouse on sustainability issues and resources. This is a web-based resource on sustainability for planners practicing in Florida that highlights sustainable practices and provides a "tool-kit" of best practices. The website is now "up" with a link from the APA FL home page, but it is still under construction. Here is the link: www.apaflorida.com. Check it out. The FLASLA Committee on Sustainable Environments, or "CoSE", is a chapter committee initiated in 2006. CoSE’s mission is to promote the profession of landscape architecture as an integral partner in promoting and executing sustainable policy and development practices throughout Florida. Members include (all ASLA members): Ruth Hamberg PLA AICP & Christina Lathrop PLA Co-Chairs; Eddie Browder PLA, Lauren Colunga PLA CNU-A, Tammy Cook PLA, Mark Johnson PLA, Tom Levin PLA CEP, Joel Mieses, Robin Pelensky PLA and Ken Sussman PLA. Also in the fall of 2012, the FLASLA Committee on Sustainable Environments (CoSE) reached out to APAFL sustainability committee members to initiate a meeting. Merle Bishop, FAICP, past president of APA FL, first reported on our cooperative initiatives in the Winter 2013 issue of Florida Planning. At that meeting, we decided to put together a multiparty panel for the conferences for summer 2013.
Photo from the 2013 FLASLA Conference in St. Petersburg. From left to right: Carey Hayo, Ruth Hamberg, Merle Bishop, David Hugglestone. We repeated the Sustainability Round Table at the APA FL Conference in Orlando on Sept 12. The executive director of national APA, Paul Farmer FAICP, joined our panel and it was a real treat to hear his perspective. He mentioned that APA (40,000 members) has been partnering with ASLA (15,000) and AIA (83,000) at the national level on a number of initiatives and advocacy efforts. Individually, our organizations are small when going up against giants such as the Petroleum Institute or the Home Builders Association about reducing green house gasses or sprawl. He noted that if our organizations could connect nationally, we might be able to make a real difference to shape policy. He encouraged our groups in Florida to create coalitions that might be replicated in other states. Our esteemed panelists also included Merle Bishop FAICP of APA FL Sustainability Committee, David Heap AIA of AIA FL, Cecelia Bonifay Esq. of ULI FL and Ruth Hamberg of FLASLA. If you missed the 2013 APA Florida Conference you can see highlights from your mobile smart phone device. Download the APA Florida mobile app from the App Store or Google Play to access the conference schedule, speakers bios and PowerPoint presentations. The Sustainability Round Table PowerPoint is not on there yet, as of the date of this report. (Note: The PowerPoint presentations will also be posted on the APA Florida website shortly). Photo from the 2013 APA FL Conference in Orlando. From left to right: Cecelia Bonifay, Jedd Heap (behind the podium), Brian Smith, Paul Farmer, and Ruth Hamberg. The session participants and audiences expressed interest in calling a meeting or "summit" of chapter presidents of all the organizations – and president-elects and maybe sustainability committee chairs – at the beginning of the year (each year) to discuss ideas in regards to collaborating on sustainability – promoting it to the public and advocating for it. We determined that each state organization should come up with their top five sustainability issues or topics and bring it to the summit so we can compare the lists, see if and what we agree on, and build consensus. Our professional organizations are doing wonderful things, providing us with terrific tools to assist in our work to create sustainable cities and environments. Each group’s sustainability projects are described in more detail in the PowerPoint presentations from the conferences. The PowerPoint from our panel will be posted the APA FL website soon. Click here to find them. The slides are also available on Slide Share by clicking here. |
FLASLA presents: Traveling Classes
For the required CEC credits
CLASSES: Laws & Rules: Provider #002709 Course #0009299 LAW, RULES, & BUSINESS OF BEAUTIFICATION, AIA #LA0009299 (2 LU/HSW), AICP-, LACES LA0009299
Advanced Building Code: Provider #002709 Course: 0009349 2010 ADA STANDARDS FOR ACCESSIBLE DESIGN WITH UPDATES, AN ADVANCED FLORIDA BUILDING CODE CLASS, AIA # LA0009349 (2 LU/HSW), AICP LA0009349, LACES LA0009349
DATES & PLACES:
Saturday, Oct. 19 Orlando
Atkins Global
First Floor Training Room
482 South Keller Road
Orlando, FL 32810
Information Desk: 407-647-7275
Organizer: Richard Klar, Section Chair (Orlandochair@flasla.org)
TIME: 8:15-10:15 a.m. Laws & Rules
10:30 a.m.-12:30 p.m. ABC
COSTS & REGISTRATIONS: Each 2-hour course: $60 ASLA members, $80 non-members Please click the button below to sign up for this event. You can also register through the website community calendar or under Latest News on the website. Instructions: Click the class you wish to attend and scroll down to registration information. Click on register for event. If you are an ASLA member, sign in on the right-hand side for member pricing before proceeding. ![]() Coffee and drinks will be provided.
SPONSORS: Many thanks to Manuel Diaz Farms for sponsoring the Traveling Classes! ![]() We would also like to thank our two host facilities, EDSA and Atkins, for allowing the use of their facilities. |