How can we prepare our coastlines for the sea change ahead?
con'text Magazine of The Conway School
//2013//
Faculty Paul Cawood Hellmund President, Director, and Professor, Design + Planning
Board of Trustees Virginia Sullivan ’86, Chair Learning by the Yard Conway, MA
Ken Byrne Professor, Humanities
Allen Rossiter, Vice Chair Lincoln, MA
Kim Erslev Professor, Landscape Design + Graphics
Mitch Anthony Clarity Northampton, MA
Jono Neiger ’03 Professor, Regenerative Design
John S. Barclay Wildlife Conservation Center UCONN, Storrs, CT
Elizabeth Farnsworth Conservation Biology Adjunct
Rachel Bird Anderson Public Health Professional Minneapolis, MN
Bill Lattrell Ecology Adjunct Glenn Motzkin Ecology Adjunct Keith Zaltzberg Digital Design Instructor Master Teachers David Jacke ’84 Permaculture Darrel Morrison Design Joel Russell Conservation Law Erik Van Lennep ’83 Sustainability Administration Mollie Babize ’84 Associate Director for Admissions + Communication David Nordstrom ’04 Associate Director for Finance, Operations, + Community Projects Priscilla Novitt ’07 Development Coordinator Past Directors Walter Cudnohufsky Founder, Director (1972–1992) Donald Walker ’79 Director (1992–2005)
The Conway School of Landscape Design 322 S. Deerfield Road PO Box 179 Conway, MA 01341-0179 (413) 369-4044 www.csld.edu
Joey Brode Joey Brode Consulting Boston, MA Kerri Culhane '10 Two Bridges Neighborhood Council New York, NY Carol Franklin Andropogon Associates Philadelphia, PA Nicholas Lasoff ’05 Lasoff Landscape Design Bennington, VT Carla Oleska Women’s Fund of Western Massachusetts Easthampton, MA Bob Pura Greenfield Community College Greenfield, MA Dolores Root Center for Creative Solutions Shelburne Falls, MA Keith Ross LandVest Warwick, MA Timothy A. Umbach Northampton, MA Seth Wilkinson ’99 Wilkinson Ecological Design Orleans, MA Emeritus Trustees David Bird (d. 2007) Gordon H. Shaw ’89 Bruce Stedman ’78 Advisers John Hanning ’82 Montpelier, VT
Nicholas T. Lasoff Editor
Richard Hubbard Shelburne Falls, MA
Lilly Pereira, Murre Creative Design
David Lynch ’85 Watertown, MA
Mollie Babize Ken Byrne Paul Cawood Hellmund Nicholas T. Lasoff Genevieve Lawlor ’11 Priscilla Novitt David Nordstrom Contributing writers © con’text is published by The Conway School, ©2013 by The Conway School of Landscape Design, Inc. All rights reserved.
Amy Klippenstein ’95 Hawley, MA Carrie Makover ’86 Fairfield, CT Darrel Morrison New York, NY Ruth Parnall Conway, MA Joel Russell Northampton, MA Steven Stang Simsbury, CT
the
Graduate Program in Sustainable Landscape Planning + Design
ConwaySchool The mission of The Conway School is to explore, develop, practice, and teach design of the land that is ecologically and socially sustainable.
The Conway School of Landscape Design, Inc., a Massachusetts non-profit corporation organized under Chapter 180 of the General Laws, is a training school of landscape design and land use planning. As an equal opportunity institution, we do not discriminate on the basis of race, color, national or ethnic origin, age, gender, sexual orientation, religion, marital or veteran status in the administration of educational, admissions, employment, or loan policies, or in any other school-administered program.
con'text Magazine of The Conway School
//2013//
F EAT U RE S
04 Anticipating the Rising Tide Conway alums address the coastal challenges of climate change.
08 Bird’s-Eye View:
Conway’s “Fourth Term”
Jesse Froelich ’08 reports on the David Bird International Service Fellowship that took her to the remote Prapat Agung peninsula in Bali.
11 The Design of Humanities
Celebrating the art of communication and a decade of “the teacher who sits on my shoulder and grins.”
DE PART ME NTS
02 From the Director
Sketch by Paul Cawood Hellmund. See his comments on the beauty and power of coasts, page 2.
ON THE COVER Designed and installed by Wilkinson Ecological Design in 2010, this bioengineering project was severely tested in winter 2012 by a series of high-intensity storms not seen in decades on Cape Cod. Despite widespread and severe erosion in many nearby locations, only modest repairs were needed in spring 2013, demonstrating that plant-focused bioengineering effectively supports natural processes as they struggle to adapt to rapidly changing tidal ranges and frequency of intense storms. PHOTO: WILKINSON ECOLOGICAL DESIGN
Printed on Rolland Environment 100 Satin, an uncoated 100% post-consumer reycled paper that is processed chlorine free, EcoLogo and FSC® Certified, and is manufactured using biogas energy. Printed by Hadley Printing, Holyoke, MA.
Paul Cawood Hellmund calls for a “deeper level of planning and design.”
03 Perspectives
Why one member of the class of 2013 chose Conway.
14 Portfolio
Student projects focus on community form, productive landscapes, and wayfinding.
20 Perspectives
Erik Van Lennep ’83 founds an NGO to focus on Mediterranean climates worldwide.
21 Conway Currents
News of and from the school
26 Commencement
Carol Franklin addresses “The Subversive Designer” at our fortieth graduation.
28 Field Notes News from alums
38 Annual Report
A summary of operations for the 2011–2012 fiscal year.
40 Looking Ahead
Expanding our collaborative network.
//2013// con'text 1
We can choose to believe that Superstorm Sandy, and the most severe drought in decades, and the worst wildfires some states have ever seen were all just a freak coincidence. Or we can choose to believe in the overwhelming judgment of science and act before it’s too late. PRESIDENT BARACK OBAMA State of the Union Address to Congress, February 12, 2013
4 The Conway School Graduate Program in Sustainable Planning + Design PHOTO: U.S. Landscape FISH AND WILDLIFE SERVICE NATIONAL DIGITAL LIBRARY
Rısıng Tıde Anticipating the
Conway Alums Address the Coastal Impacts of Climate Change
“In just this one estuary, we’ve had millions of dollars of damage this winter. Coastlines have retreated ten feet, stairways are gone, plantings are destroyed. Much of the damage is not even known yet.” Seth Wilkinson ’99 is no stranger to storm surge impact. His firm, Wilkinson Ecological Design, is based in Orleans, Massachusetts, a mid-Cape Cod community whose summer residents have not yet returned. “Coastal property owners will have disappointing news when they return this summer,” he says. Coastal stabilization is a part of every project Wilkinson Ecological undertakes, as they anticipate a rise in sea levels and more frequent superstorms. A number of factors are linked to climate change, including what Seth calls a “slacking drift current” in the North Atlantic, due to supercooled water coming off the Greenland ice shelf. The drift current is like a ridgeline in the ocean that fans out over many miles as the greater volume of water slows the current. He has seen the impact of this increase in water volume in the protected estuaries of the Cape. “Even halophytic communities [those adapted to saline conditions] are struggling,” Seth reports. Vast areas of hightide bush, a succulent shrub in the aster family that grows in the saline soils of salt marshes and shorelines, are dying, he reports, either flooded out or just exposed to too much salt.
BY M O L LI E BA B IZ E
The salt marshes are leapfrogging—low salt marsh plants jumping upland of high marsh communities—in an effort to stay ahead of rising sea levels. All along the eastern seaboard, Conway alums are addressing the challenges of rising tides, increasingly powerful storms, and saltwater intrusion. Annie Cox ’10 organized a Coastal Training Program at the Wells Reserve in Maine, for public and private land use professionals and planners to learn about climate adaptation efforts for coastal communities in New Hampshire and Maine. Karen Dunn ’11 sits on the Southeast Advisory Board of the 10,000-member North Carolina Coastal Federation, a nonprofit conservation organization focused on protecting and restoring the North Carolina coast through education, advocacy, and habitat preservation and restoration. Dead and dying pine trees in coastal marshes exhibit the first effects of saltwater intrusion, she reports, and beach erosion is worsening. Karen believes the public education and volunteer efforts to restore oyster reefs and salt marshes are essential to protect North Carolina’s 300-mile coastline. Working at the intersection of the public and private sectors, Robbin Peach ’78 is the executive director of the Collaborative Institute for Oceans, Climate and Sustainability (CIOCS). From her office at the University of Massachusetts in Boston,
//2013// con'text 5
Seth Wilkinson, center, explains the process of planting coconut fiber logs with native salt marsh grasses to the Conway class of 2013 during a site visit.
she organized a Global Conference on Climate Change, Ocean Impacts, and International Security in May 2012. A white paper resulting from that three-day conference summarizes a “rising tide of new security issues” resulting from climate change. “Climate change is a threat multiplier,” her report begins. The world’s oceans are inextricably tied not just to military security but human security. As agricultural, economic, social, and personal security is challenged, populations are destabilized, resulting in political unrest. Extreme weather events, melting polar ice, sea level rise, along with ocean acidification, deoxygenation, and warming “pose critical threats to human populations, to natural ecosystems, and to national and global stability,” according to Robbin’s white paper. The ecological, economic and social impact of Superstorm Sandy made this clear: hundreds of miles of coastland were inundated, and thousands of homes destroyed or damaged to the tune of $60 to $80 billion. Financial, transportation, and utility systems were shut down. Rising sea temperatures and increased nutrient runoff result in an increasing number of dead zones in the ocean, as oxygen levels plummet. Ocean acidification is accelerating, as the level of carbon dioxide dissolved in oceans increase. The increased acidity makes waters more corrosive, which affects ocean ecosystems and built structures alike. Noting that the U.S. military has been actively anticipating and planning for climate change, the report cites “a significant failure in governance in many countries . . . to recognize and respond to the complex interactions between climate and security systems.” Despite this grim picture, the CIOCS white paper focuses on economic and social opportunities, with a call for improved planning and coordination among a broad range of stakeholders. Bioengineering Group in Salem, Massachusetts, has taken a lead in addressing the coastal challenges of climate change, clearly benefitting from this economic opportunity. Founded in 1992 by Wendi Goldsmith ’90, the firm has taken an interdisciplinary and collaborative approach to creating resilient communities. According to Wendi, “New scales and types of green infrastructure measures have begun to enter professional practice in relation to storm surge and flood impacts, especially for
climate change adaptation solutions.” Hybrid measures use vegetative communities to buffer structural elements that could not otherwise withstand the forces that increased storm activity could impose. At the larger scale, wetlands, dunes, oyster reefs, and mangroves help to stabilize fragile or dynamic landforms. Post-Katrina New Orleans provided Bioengineering Group’s biggest project to date: a collaborative venture with the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers and private-sector engineering, science, and construction professionals to create “the greater New Orleans Hurricane and Storm Damage Risk Reduction System.” The Lake Borgne Surge Barrier—a massive, forty-two-foot-high, hydraulically operated gate—was designed to withstand 100-year floods and reduce the impact of 500-year storms. Of this project, Wendi writes, “Recognizing that no hard infrastructure could perform well in the long term without being surrounded and shielded by healthy coastal wetlands and protective landforms such as barrier islands, these functions were considered as core functional elements.” By providing multiple lines of defense, Wendi believes this model can be replicated in other coastal cities that need to adapt to climate change. Bioengineering Group has collaborated on smaller and more local projects in similar fashion. As part of a larger project to eliminate combined sewer overflows to the Alewife Brook by the City of Cambridge, they designed a constructed stormwater management basin that could simultaneously meet habitat and recreational functions envisioned by the Massachusetts Department of Conservation and Recreation. Designing for coastal stability while restoring ecological systems and habitat is not easy, says Seth Wilkinson. These are dynamic systems, and the coastline will change. But despite the challenges of winter 2013, Seth says their plantfocused restoration efforts have weathered the storms well, where mechanical fasteners have failed. “It’s encouraging to see,” he says. “There is need for some repairs and maintenance, but that is normal for bioengineering projects.” In every project Wilkinson Ecological undertakes on Cape Cod and the islands, Seth anticipates the migration of salt marshes, inserting supplemental plantings of native grasses. “The marshes need to keep moving, just like sharks,” he says. “They won’t make it if they come up against a seawall, so we need to create alternatives to seawalls, a more natural shoreline that continues to provide a means to hold sediment and provides them someplace to go.” Although he has an undergraduate education in environmental studies, Seth credits his Conway education with a larger understanding of natural systems. The process of site analysis, understanding the processes and all the different forces at work, underlies his work to this day. In addition, he cites the experience dealing with municipal boards and citizen groups on the larger team projects as essential training. “Massachusetts has rigorous regulatory processes which present challenging hurdles for every project we undertake.” Seth encourages more Conway alums to pursue work in ecological restoration, and in fact he has hired several. His firm keeps growing and, even so, is having a hard time keeping up with all the projects. It’s a great field, he says, full of opportunity for those who want to help coastal communities prepare for the challenges of a changing climate. -
6 The Conway School Graduate Program in Sustainable Landscape Planning + Design
SPRINGBOARD TO FURTHER EDUCATION
to determine whether these more highly
are constantly being degraded by the
maintained (and largely privately held)
force of wave action, and in fact actually
areas impede migration. “There hasn’t
increase the scouring by wave energy at
been any real study of what happens in
the base of the wall to the point where
these urban and suburban areas,” she
the walls fail. “That’s what happened in
Whereas Wendi Goldsmith followed
says, adding that it will be important
lower Manhattan with Superstorm Sandy.
her Yale degree in geophysics and
to raise public awareness of the role of
The problem ends up being worse than
environmental science with a year at
salt marshes.
it would have been without the wall.”
Marsh Migration along the Long Island Sound
the Conway School, Kate Gehron ’09
Kate believes it is important to have
Christina is looking at the physics
has gone the other direction. Currently
this kind of research be visible, to have
behind storm surges. She hopes to
enrolled at the Yale School of Forestry
it be a part of the community’s work.
combine ecological modeling with 3D
and Environmental Studies, Kate will
“Any coastal adaptation plan must be
modeling to explore various methods
spend the summer of 2013 studying
tied into a community plan,” she says,
to dissipate wave action. “I’m exploring
marsh migration along the coast of
“and decisions need to be made on
how the interface between the built
Long Island Sound.
particularity of place.”
urban environment and rising sea levels
Salt marshes attenuate wave energy.
Kate cites her Conway education as
can be rethought.”
As more frequent and violent storms
the reason she looks to place-based
are anticipated, broader areas of salt
solutions; she is not interested in the
between built and biological spaces as
marsh are necessary to decrease the
more general environmental policy she
a transect, with a combination of built
energy of storm surges. As sea levels
finds in much of her program. “We are
infrastructure and natural processes
rise, Kate explains, salt marshes in tem-
facing some hard decisions ahead on
to mitigate wave action. Her research
perate areas are drowning. High marsh
issues surrounding private property.”
focuses on the concept of surface
areas can migrate as the mean high-water mark keeps rising and salt water kills off the upland vegetation, but if the necessary sediment layer does not rise as quickly as sea levels then the low
Her model looks at the gradient
roughness at various scales: the bottom
Built and Biological Spaces as a Transect
marsh community will slowly die.
of the ocean or topography of the land, the height and structure of vegetation, and the granular size of the substrate. “At each scale you get a different characterization of surface roughness,”
Christina Puerto '12 is pursuing a
she explains. “My goal is to understand
England coastline is currently mowed,
master of science en route to a PhD
at what scale the surface of the salt
including ball fields, playgrounds, golf
in architectural sciences with a con-
marsh significantly decreases wave
courses, and back yards. Kate’s field-
centration in built ecologies, at the
energy. At what scale does it make
work will compare migration rates in
Case Center for Architecture, Science
a difference to intervene and increase
woody areas and turf lawn landscapes
and Ecology. The program is a part of
surface roughness?”
Much of the property along the New
the Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute in
explore the larger question of the
and Merrill, based in New York City.
importance of biodiversity in an urban
A scientist by nature, Christina is
PHOTO: KATE GEHRON
context. She ponders, “How can we live
exploring how densely developed urban
with fluctuating and volatile hydraulic
areas will address higher water levels
systems, with more adaptation and
and storm surges. “Simply restoring the
less defense?”
marsh is not feasible, given the space
The ability to think across scales
available,” she explains. “An ecological
is something Christina credits to her
system requires a certain degree of wild-
year at Conway. In addition, Conway’s
ness, and these are active ports. You
design process of continuing to explore
can’t go into the built landscape and
alternatives, evaluating them and adjust-
undevelop it in favor of salt marshes. How
ing them, is another helpful tool she
do you work with something the width of
took from Conway. Both she and Kate
the East River?”
also say the emphasis on presentation
In urban areas like New York City, As sea levels rise, salt marshes are drowning. Phragmites control is another challenge.
The topic of Christina's PhD will
collaboration with Skidmore Owings
skills—being able to articulate the project
the natural shoreline ecology has been
challenges and proposed solutions—
replaced with sea walls. These structures
has been invaluable.
//2013// con'text 7
Bird Fellow, Jesse Froelich, at the Tirta Temple outside Ubud, where Balinese bathe in the holy water.
DAVID BIRD FELLOWSHIP In honor of David Bird, a longtime friend and former trustee of the Conway School, his family and friends established the David Bird International Service Fellowship to provide opportunities for recent Conway graduates to undertake public service projects outside the United States, through which they can further their design and planning skills while supporting NGOs and local agencies in participating countries. Since 2009, Bird fellows have been placed in Panama, Bali, and Southeast Asia. Jesse Froelich ’08 was the 2011–2012 David Bird International Service Fellow to Bali, Indonesia in the fall of 2011. Elizabeth Cooper ’10 returned in spring 2013 from Kuala Lumpur, Malaysia, where she developed guidelines for planning and implementing green schoolyard projects. We look forward to publishing Elizabeth’s report in an upcoming issue of con’text. 8 The Conway School Graduate Program in Sustainable Landscape Planning + Design
Bali Bird’s-Eye View:
My “Fourth Term” at Conway Known for art, yoga, spiritual retreats and, alas, “Eat, Pray, Love,” Ubud—a traditional village near the middle of the island of Bali—is where I spent the majority of my six-week fellowship. It was a great place to absorb the “Baliness” of Bali. I discovered something new every time I walked up and down Jalan Hanoman, the main street in-the-middle-of-it-all. Sidewalks are lined with parked motorbikes, and colorfully littered with the twice-daily offerings that every Balinese family makes to the spirits: palm-sized woven baskets filled with bright flower petals, incense and holy water, left to dissolve into the streetscape after the sacred moment of offering passes. A constant buzz of motorbikes sings “Flight of the Bumblebees” to all passersby, in a weaving negotiation with cars, trucks, and the odd bicycle. It is impossible to perceive the boundaries of Ubud because it bleeds into one artists’ village after another in an endless mini-opolis along the narrow roads of Bali. The island is densely built-out, but with the traditional indoor-outdoor architecture, ubiquitous temples, scattered rice paddies, river crossings, and no buildings reaching above the treeline, the urbanity somehow blends into the vegetation creating a sense that one never leaves the jungle. On the streets of Ubud, I was greeted daily by the duality of Balinese culture: tourists and expatriates peacefully coexisting with the locals—though in very separate worlds— connected only by commerce (or so Jesse’s full report it seems). In many can be read online: tinyurl.com/balireport ways this duality of culture defined my fellowship experience—for better or for worse—with a project that inhabited and served the world of western visitors. Though I spent most of my time in Ubud, my project site was located in the
]
remote Prapat Agung peninsula within in West Bali National Park. In Bali, the National Park designation is one solely of land preservation with little emphasis on public access or tourism. Geography, more than anything else, is responsible for the differences between West Bali National Park and the rest of the island. A string of volcanic peaks runs parallel along Bali’s northern shore, separating the north coast from the rest of Bali—a striking partition between ecosystems and cultures. The national park is a 47,000-acre monsoon forest protected by Indonesia’s National Ministry of Forestry. It is the last bit of true wilderness that remains in Bali. The approach to the park descends the northern slopes of the mountains, exiting the tropics and entering an arid monsoon forest at the tail end of its dry season. Parts of it look almost like African savannah. A ferry crosses Terima Bay to the eastern shore of the Prapat Agung peninsula. There are no roads on the peninsula, and its only amenity is a rustic-chic luxury resort, the Waka
STO RY + ILLUSTR ATIONS BY J ESSE FR OEH LICH ’08
Shorea. It was to be my The concept for student dorms includes natural home for the next ten days. ventilation through a My client, Ben Tamblyn, raised platform foundation, rooftop rainwater a British native, is founder catchment (stored in and executive director of barrels), and minimal impact to the in-sand the Odyssey Institute, a ecosystem including learning adventure comvegetated swales to catch additional runoff. pany that specializes in overnight outdoor education excursions for international students. The organization’s mission is “to contribute to a global culture of sustainability through the provision of customized learning adventures in the fields of environmental education and cultural studies.” Programs include experiential ecology, arts, cultural studies, and service projects. As part of the company’s plan for growth, Ben intends to lease a hectare of land on which to build a residential facility for hosting international school groups of up to fifty students, the Tropical Ecology Adventure Centre (TEAC). My project was to recommend a site boundary for TEAC, conduct initial site analysis, develop preliminary
//2013// con’text 9
Coastal mangrove patch and seagrass bed will protect the sensitive coral reef that extends into the ocean from the TEAC site.
West
East Not to Scale
Waterline
Mangrove Forest
Coastal Mangrove Patch
Beach
design alternatives based on the Odyssey Institute’s programmatic needs and Ben’s desire to develop the site in an ecologically sensitive manner. My first step was to define development goals for the TEAC site: 1. Environmental Education: Provide access to a remote natural environment for educational purposes, exposing students to unique coastal habitats and engendering values of conservation of sensitive ecosystems. 2. Land Stewardship: Serve as stewards of the TEAC site and surrounding area through integrated educational programming, including monitoring and restoration activities. 3. Ecologically Integrated Design: Develop a facility that allows access to and interaction with the natural landscape without having negative impacts on the host ecosystems. When we arrived in the national park, Ben and I were met at the boat landing by Gove DePuy ’02, seven-year resident of Bali, and facilitator of my fellowship experience. Gove was instrumental in helping to define project parameters. He also supplied me with essential materials such as a thick book on the ecology of Bali and a GPS tracking device. After two days getting to know the TEAC site with Ben and Gove, the two of them returned to Ubud and I continued project work on my own. Each day I tried to go on some sort of excursion, though I was limited because the resort required a guide to leave their concession boundary. Some days I would hike down to the TEAC site to make observations at different times of day. Twice I ventured on mountain bike all the way to Gilimanuk, the port town at the opposite side of the peninsula that faces Java less
Seagrass Bed
than one mile away across the Bali Strait. With Gove’s GPS in tow, these bike rides allowed me to map the trails on the peninsula, showing overland routes to the TEAC site. (Though the site’s primary access would continue to be by boat, emergency routes to the road would be important.) The rides also allowed me to observe the cultural differences between this part of Bali and the rest. After ten days I had collected about as much information as would be practical, and returned to my homestay in Ubud. With plenty of ideas on how to shape a project (and needing only the discipline to get it into a presentable format), I spent most of my days in Clear Cafe, a lovely restaurant with great food, great atmosphere, great Internet, and an uncanny patience with westerners who seemed to think they had something important to do on a laptop. At Clear Cafe, the “Tropical Ecology Adventure Centre Ecological Development Guide” was born. The guide somewhat resembles a plan I might have done for spring term at Conway and includes seven sections: a general introduction, regional context, site boundaries and characteristics, development principles and recommendations, technology briefs (elaboration on rainwater catchment and solar power), three site design concepts, and some ideas for integrated educational curriculum that ties in to the ecological features of the site.
¦ Bird Fellowship:
tinyurl.com/ davidbirdfellowship For more about Living Routes:
livingroutes.org
Coral Reef
Though the project was ideal in terms of utilizing the skills I learned at the Conway School, I was nagged by the question of whom I was serving with this International Service Fellowship. My fellowship project was completely subsumed by the western overlay onto Balinese culture, seemingly to the exclusion of the local Balinese population. On the other hand, Ben and the Odyssey Institute would be true stewards of the site (which would otherwise receive minimal attention), so while not in direct service to the Balinese people, there was the sense that the project would contribute to greater care of the land and propagation of environmental values through education. For this fantastic opportunity to learn, travel, and serve, I owe many thanks to the family of David Bird and to the Conway School. I also send gratitude to Gove DePuy and Ben Tamblyn for hosting and facilitating a tremendous experience, and making me so comfortable in a new place. And finally, a heartfelt terima kasih to those who truly provided me a home: the friendly and welcoming staff of the Dana Sari Homestay in Ubud, at the Waka Shorea Resort in West Bali National Park, and at Clear Cafe in Ubud, which was essentially my home (and definitely my sustenance!) as I cranked out the pages of my “fourth term” Conway project. -
Applications are being reviewed for the 2013–2014 David Bird Fellow. Applicants could choose from one of five predetermined project sites in Brazil, Costa Rica, India, Panama, or Peru. Destinations in Brazil, India, and Peru are offered in collaboration with Living Routes, a program that provides integrative educational programs within sustainable communities.
10 The Conway School Graduate Program in Sustainable Landscape Planning + Design
The Design of Humanities How can I tell what I think till I see what I say? —E. M. Forster
Former humanities professors Richard Williams, left, and Maureen Buchanan Jones join Ken Byrne at Conway’s fortieth anniversary celebration.
Since the advent of the Conway School in 1972, the teaching of humanities has always had a central role in the design curriculum. Founding Director Walter Cudnohufsky gives both a personal and a professional explanation for this. As a self-described “farm kid from Michigan,” he realized, “In order to make your way in the world, you need to be articulate.” A good idea will not see the light of day, he believes, if not expressed clearly. “There are multiple ways to get at information. Graphics are one way to explore ideas,” he says, “and language provides another.” He calls it a “happy wondrous dance,” this ability to employ two languages: “Having a second language gives you a choice, each one informs the other, and going back and forth (between graphics and words) opens up new understandings.” For that reason, the core faculty has always included a professor of humanities. Richard Williams taught the early classes from 1978 to 1987, and is remembered for his philosophic questions about the meaning of landscape design. “A design education is a life education,” he often said, as he challenged students to dig deeper into the meaning imbued in the landscape—the history, the sense of place, and the relationship humans have had with the land. Asheley Griffith (who many of us know as Randy) provided an early sounding board for Walt when the school was conceived, and served as visiting critic honing presentation skills during “charrette week” rehearsals before joining the faculty from 1987
to 1993. A terrific editor, she provided succinct interventions for individual and team presentations that were timely and, in Walt’s words, “earthshaking.” Walt also recalls the Tuesday afternoon teas Randy would host, with literatureinspired conversations on landscape and myth. Maureen Buchanan Jones took on the role of Conway’s poet laureate as well as counselor, editor, and humanities professor from 1993 to 2003. She also tackled the necessary but unenviable task of formalizing a humanities curriculum as Conway moved from candidacy status to full accreditation with the New England Association of Schools and Colleges. And her delightful humor—punctuated by an infectious laugh—lightened many a serious session. Her poems often captured in lyrical ways the extraordinary depth of the Conway experience. Ten years ago, Ken Byrne put on the mantle of humanities professor. A quarter of the classes that Conway has graduated has benefited from his guided discussions across an increasingly broad spectrum of topics, everything from canonical works like “The Tragedy of the Commons” to the latest thinking on New Urbanism, overpopulation, and climate change. His students have laughed at his irreverent humor, chafed under his exacting edits, and in the end appreciated the depth of his knowledge and the skill of his teaching. We celebrate the decade that Ken has contributed to Conway and look forward to his working with Conway students for many more years. -
//2013// con’text 11
Ken Byrne THE FIRS T 10 YEAR S van for ten days during the School’s trip to Quebec, Montreal, and Ottawa. My ongoing experience with Ken repeatedly confirmed our sagacity at grabbing him up. Helpfulness, a love of jazz, and the ability to perform with grace and good humor the endless list of tasks that the Conway School expects of each faculty member are among Ken’s endearing qualities. His putting me on to Amy Goodman’s Democracy Now radio program, however, is unforgiveable. Since I retired, I cannot start the day without tuning in to be reminded of how despicable and wrongheaded so many individuals of my species continue to be. Let’s start a movement to clone Ken Byrne. —DONALD WALKER ’79, Director 1992–2005
R U N N I N G R A M PA N T T H R O U G H
THE MA ZE The works Ken gave us to read and
discuss and write about revealed the depth of his and our humanity to us and changed all of our lives forever. He let us run rampant in the mysteries of the words and concepts before us in the readings he assigned each week. Many of the essays we read and discussed led us into the depths of our souls and into the wilderness, yet somehow Ken quietly guided us back again to our projects and how the topics
CLONE K EN BYRNE!
related to our work. . . . Ken’s stamina and perseverance spurred us on even when we felt we
During the spring of 2003, Kenneth Byrne responded to an ad requesting
could not go another round. He placed
“a teacher of technical writing, public speaking, and ecologically based
tricky little jokes deep in the maze of
literature.” Ken was one of eighteen applicants but his credentials, publications,
purple edits in the margins of our report
and experience blew the others away with his involvement with geoscience,
texts. We’d read them late at night while
environmental education for the Philippines, and sustainable development
revising our text for the umpteenth time
for the Pioneer Valley Planning Commission.
and laugh out loud and curse him simulta-
At the first trustees’ meeting following Ken’s arrival as a faculty member, he
neously; knowing full well he was making
was lauded as a “valuable addition from the start” and “has already taken on
us better communicators. Ken’s excellence
more than he was supposed to according to his job description.” Some of those
made us excellent and set the bar high
extras included assistance with building shelves and filling them and driving a
forever more. —JULIE WELCH ’11
12 The Conway School Graduate Program in Sustainable Landscape Planning + Design
THE
C O N FID E N C E FOR THOSE WHO WANT A
CHALLENGE
At the end of my interview in March 2010, Ken asked me why I had sunglasses with me when it wasn’t that sunny out, and I first thought, “Who asks that at an interview?” Then I pondered the unsettling theory that, if the sunglasses had proven enough to prompt question, what else will I be challenged on at Conway? The answer, I would learn time and again, was everything, and in no small part by Ken.
KEN GIVES PEOPLE TO EXPRESS THEIR VISION IN A CONVINCING AND PROFESSIONAL WAY IS AN
ESSENTIAL COMPONENT OF DESIGN EDUCATION. —TOD D LYN C H ’05
Ken’s keen editing eye is at once impressive, humorous, frustrating,
you reckoned with. The care that Ken has devoted to expressing himself deserves the same care in return, and a half-hour job turns into two hours. You send your carefully worded and explained edits to Ken. You are, after all, critiquing the master, and in spite of your more than twenty years of teaching, writing, and editing, you are somewhat apprehensive. Later rather than sooner—yes, even the master pushes a deadline on occasion—you receive his responses: (1) Yes, change that word. (2) No, that’s exactly what I meant to say. (3) You’re right, that’s unclearly stated. Just delete it. (4) NO, you can
I can’t vouch for every student Ken has
NOT cut anything so that the essay will
and even potentially offensive. He once
ever taught, but I’d wager that I’m not
fit the page. You ask the designer for a
admitted to my class that he edited the
the only one who has these imaginary
few more inches on the page. You have
wedding invitation of a former student
dialogues with him.
no choice, for the master has spoken, and
and sent it back. To many more years
Ken has made all of us deeper thinkers,
with pleasure you return the consideration
of Ken-way, and to many more students
better writers and presenters, and more
he inspires through his careful editing,
critical judges of our own work and that
his witty sense of humor, his pet peeves,
of others. He has given us the confidence
and his interest in everything from plant
to speak publically on topics on which we
databases to club rugby games. —AHRON
are not yet experts. He has given us the
LERMAN ’11
confidence to teach ourselves by teaching
AND SO MUCH MORE ...
others, to realize how much we actually
All that was new to us was new to you,
do know and to be effective communica-
and you presented us with a model
tors and conveyors of that information.
of learning-while-doing that we could
THE
TEACHER
WHO SITS ON MY
So thank you, Ken Byrne, for your
patience, intelligence, and the best dry humor.—KIRSTEN BARINGER ’04
heroes, Ken has that superhuman ability
rysm every time we hear the word “sign-
to make you feel like you can do any-
age.” Others cannot control their urge
thing, even when you are both aware that
to blurt out, “It’s SIGNS!” and then run
you are clueless. There is this underlying
away screaming. And there you sit on our
quality—a combination of patience, per-
shoulders, grinning.—JAMIE POTTERN ’12
into our psyches. Thanks to you, some of us get an aneu-
sistence, and intellectual brilliance—that rubs off on his students. His thorough entrains us to his mind. . . . Wait . . . Uh oh. There he is. The little miniature
embrace and grow from. You did it with
us, and your sense of humor. And most of
SHOULDER & GRINS
editing and reviewing of our work
T. L ASOFF ’05, EDITOR OF CON’TEXT .
uncompromising edits, your belief in all of all, for forever engraining your pet peeves
Like our many unsung Conway School
that he has given to so many.— NIC HOLAS
EDITING THE MASTER Many of Ken’s former students write
At unwaking hours on Friday mornings, the only thing more effective than coffee is one of Ken’s masterful orations on things like the
YZ Space did not allow us to include all the submissions from Ken’s students and colleagues. To read complete and additional texts:
tinyurl.com/ kenbyrne
disparity of ethics.—DOUG GUEY-LEE ’08 Ken has a wide streak of generosity, a self-deprecating
Ken on my shoulder with his hands on
about the experience of having their
his hips, his head cocked a little to the
work edited by him. Imagine, however,
a mind like a steel trap, and the inscruta-
side, asking rhetorically, “Does his mind
for a moment, the experience of editing
bility of a Zen monk. Lurking somewhere
really ‘entrain’ you? Is that the word you
something Ken has written for con’text.
in there is a rowdy Irish schoolboy, I’m
want to use?” Oh goodness, Ken, I just
You are his former student. You know his
sure of it.—R ANDY MARKS ’09
don’t know.
penchant for clarity of thought and usage.
And so I’m forced to pull out the dusty
sense of humor,
You think, This won’t take me any time
Ken taught me the language of question-
dictionary or thesaurus, restructure this,
at all. But the subtlety and density of his
ing, which has been really valuable.
reword that . . . and the dialogue goes on.
thought require much more attention than
—JENNIFER CAMPB ELL ’09
-
//2013// con’text 13
Portfolio
Students’ Projects: 2011–2012
Urban Form + Green Communities Sustainable communities come in all sizes and locations, but share certain elements: walkable, mixed-use village centers; good public transit; protected and unfragmented open spaces; plenty of central gathering places; shade trees to reduce heat island effects; and attention to infiltrating stormwater. Conway students help communities think about the spatial forms and relationships that support resilient, integrated, healthy towns and cities.
Real projects for real clients form the core of Conway’s intensive ten-month curriculum. In the fall, each student is assigned an individual project for a residential or small municipal site. Teams in the winter tackle larger land planning projects at a regional or town-wide scale. The spring’s team projects focus on an intermediate and more detailed community scale. As often happens, common themes emerge which a number of projects explore. Find complete projects online at:
tinyurl.com/2011-2012projects
DENSITY PROTECTS OPEN SPACE WAT E RB OR O, M AINE
A lakeshore boardwalk allows people to walk to Lakeside Park for a meal overlooking the lake.
Since major wildfires swept the area in the 1940s, the small town of Waterboro, Maine, has lacked a vibrant village center. There is fear that strip development will grow along main roads. Suburban-style residential developments have begun to appear, compromising natural resources. Two Conway teams—Jeanette O’Connor and Carlos Wright in the winter, and Shana Hostetter and Molly Hutt in the spring—helped the community envision how development might be directed to four distinct village centers. Alternative zoning codes to encourage mixed-use, higher density developments would allow Alternate Design for Soldiers Park In this alternative arrangement, the short street segment eliminated in the village plan is re-instated and the park is expanded to the northwest. Buildings shown in blue are proposed.
residents to share resources, reduce automobile use, and conserve energy while establishing community identity and a sense of place. At the same time, directing growth to these centers could preserve large forested areas and sensitive environments like the Waterboro Pine Barrens and Lake Ossipee.
14 The Conway School Graduate Program in Sustainable Landscape Planning + Design
/ PORT F OL I O /
COOLING, CLEANING, + WELCOMING GR E E N F I ELD, MASSAC HUSETTS
During major rainstorms, storm drains in the urban center of Greenfield, Massachusetts,
Continuous Tree Trench Elements
flush street runoff directly into the Green River. The resulting degradation of water quality and the urban heat island effect are two of the city’s major environmental
Permeable concrete tree grates
challenges. City planners hope to create a vibrant and welcoming downtown that serves residents, attracts visitors, supports
Permeable concrete sidewalk
local businesses, and contributes to a healthy environment. Rachel Jackson and Christina Puerto’s streetscape and parking lot designs address these issues by improving the downtown’s ecological functions while creating a safe, welcoming pedestrian experience. The
STORMWATER DRAIN
design for the Fiske parking lot minimizes impervious surfaces, increases tree health, and filters stormwater while improving a central downtown gathering space. The new shady and pleasant Chapman lot generates electricity and slows, cools, and cleans storm-
Small bar and raised lip blocks large litter from entering
Permeable paving inset in drain
water before it reaches the Green River.
CONNECTING PEOPLE + PLACES HA RT FO R D, CO NNECTIC UT
While the Northeast Neighborhood of Hartford, Connecticut, faces many challenges, including a poverty rate of 38 percent, a 17.4 percent unemployment rate, and the highest crime rates in the city, there are also churches, schools, organizations, and historic Keney Park that contribute to residents’ quality of life. Nonprofit Community Solutions is working with residents to overcome the neighborhood’s economic and social challenges. Seana Cullinan and Rachel Jackson contributed to these efforts by proposing ways to improve connectivity, walkability, and safety. Their report envisions the eastern edge of Keney Park as a greenway, activates the front of the former Swift factory site as a community space, and transforms vacant lots into places for food cultivation and pocket parks. Design ideas for the arts, transportation, education, and job training are also explored.
REDEVELOPING A VITAL URBAN CENTER FAL L PR OJ EC TS
In Greenfield, Massachusetts, a local developer renovated a three-story century-old building adjacent to the new multimodal transit station with photovoltaic panels, triple-glazed windows, and geothermal heating. Molly Hutt provided a site plan to match the owner’s sustainability goals for the mixed-used building, proposing vegetated swales, rain gardens, and salt-tolerant species to infiltrate stormwater, while creating new pedestrian
A proposed pocket park replaces a vacant lot to provide green space at the center of the Westland Street Corridor.
connections to town center. Around the corner, the Veterans Memorial Mall is a jumble of mismatched elements added over time. Christina Gibson’s design for the park creates a shaded plaza made more flexible and spacious by grouping the memorials along one building, creating open sight lines and increasing the perception of safety. Porous pavement and dappled shade will help to reduce the heat island effect, infiltrate stormwater, and create a more comfortable gathering space for all.
//2013// con’text 15
/ PORTFOLIO /
Managing for Productivity across Scales Food security plans, local food systems, farmland protection—these projects have been a consistent part of student work in recent years as communities and individuals rethink what future resilience may require. But there are other productive uses of land that support community resilience, and the projects undertaken by students in 2011–2012 reflect several: creating a sanctuary for medicinal plants, designing a site for production of biofuels, and increasing ecological management of an agroforestry business.
Mounted trail map orients visitors in central location
Hedge of
Gravel parking area holds 17 cars
Pergola defines entrance to welcome center
viburnums and dogwoods
To trail
way Drive Shade garden
Turn-in to parking area visible to visitors
Welcome Center
Main
e w Cre Hollo
k
To trails
Medicine wheel provides meaningful focal point
Hazelnut hedge casts shade for a shade garden
Door leads to propagation area; pergola and bench offer shady outdoor seating
Accessible footbridge connects north and south sides of the creek
Vegetation bump-out defines entrance to welcome center
0
50
100ft
A SANCTUARY FOR WILD MEDICINAL HERBS R UTL A N D, O HIO
Can a botanical sanctuary engage and educate the public about
are trained in the sustainable harvesting and propagation of more
herbal medicine without damaging the fragile ecosystem on
than five hundred medicinal plants. Christina Gibson and Evelyn
which these plants depend? Alarmed by the overharvesting of
Lane provided design alternatives for parking, lodging, classroom,
medicinal plants, United Plant Savers acquired a botanically rich
production, storage, interpretive trails, and year-round caretakers,
380-acre property in the Appalachian foothills of southeastern
as well as methods to restore damaged sites and control invasive
Ohio and established the Goldenseal Botanical Sanctuary that
plants in this rare mixed mesophytic forest. UpS Executive Direc-
has become a model for others across the nation. Here, interns
tor Susan Leopold ’98 brought this project to Conway.
16 The Conway School Graduate Program in Sustainable Landscape Planning + Design
/ PORT F OL I O /
INCREASING DIVERSITY IN AGROFORESTRY CAUQ UE N ES , C H ILE
When Alto Cauquenes, a familyowned agroforestry business in south central Chile, purchased a 1,400-hectare (3,460-acre) property in 2002, the soils were degraded and highly eroded. Owners reclaimed the land by planting three types of
CORE HABITAT
timber trees, complemented by vine-
RIPARIAN CONNECTIONS
yards, olives, and some field crops. In 2012, Christina Puerto and Molly
OFF-SITE CORRIDOR CONNECTION
Hutt provided an ecological management plan to diversify the single age timber stands by rotating harvests, adding native trees, expanding riparian corridors, improving wildlife corridors, and managing runoff to improve water quality.
Core Habitat and Potential Connections. Expanding areas of core habitat and creating connections both on-site and beyond will help to protect riparian corridors and wildlife movement by reducing fragmentation.
Factors of a Foodshed Analysis
[1] Size of the area’s population
Result of a Foodshed Analysis
[2] Food calories needed to feed the area’s population
[3] Caloric yield of the area’s farmland
Approximate acreage of regional farmland needed to feed the area’s population
REGIONAL AGRICULTURAL CAPACITY // FR AN KLI N COU N T Y, M ASSACH U S E T TS
// Could Franklin County,
Massachusetts, feed itself in a post-peak-oil economy? As part of a regional sustainability plan, this countywide Farmland and Foodshed Study by Laura Elizares and Evelyn Lane looked at pasture, cropland, and orchard, as well as agricultural soils currently in woodland, to determine if self-sufficiency would be possible. Although blessed with abundant farmland, the resulting model of self-reliance would focus on growing crops, meat, and dairy best suited for this western Massachusetts region. Mary Praus ’10 was the client contact for the Regional Council of Governments.
BUILDING LOCAL FOOD CONNECTIONS
FOCUS ON FOOD AND FUEL
CO NCO R D, MASSAC HUSETTS
FAL L PROJ E C TS
In the time of Thoreau, Concord, Massachusettts, was a largely agricultural
In addition to several residential clients who
community located a distant twenty miles from Boston. Now a more densely
requested site plans to include vegetable
developed suburb, many of its residents would like
gardens, chickens, bees, and medicinal herbs,
to reclaim some of the self-sufficiency of a local food
a site design by Rachel Jackson for Co-op
system. Christina Gibson and Jamie Pottern assessed
Power’s new biodiesel plant in Greenfield,
the capacity of each component: land use, produc-
Massachusetts, included future zones for
tion, distribution, processing, storage, preparation,
growing oil crops, and Jamie Pottern looked
consumption, and food-waste recovery in town. Their
at design alternatives for ServiceNet’s eleven-
report, with a comprehensive chart outlining specific
acre Prospect Meadow Farm in Hatfield,
steps to increased self-reliance, won an award from the
Massachusetts, a therapeutic farm serving
Massachusetts chapter of the American Planning Association for outstanding
physically, mentally, and emotionally chal-
planning by a student project.
lenged residential clients.
//2013// con’text 17
/ PORTFOLIO /
Paths + Wayfinding Helping people find their way through a visually complex landscape is an important part of landscape planning and design. Doing it in ways that are sensitive to the needs of people and ecology are even more important. Wayfinding was the focus of several recent Conway student projects in Massachusetts, Vermont, and Arizona. With each project, paths were designed for much more than mere utilitarian function. For example, they help visitors not only perceive and appreciate the landscape but also have positive social interactions.
PASEO AS OASIS A JO, ARIZO NA
On the hottest days, taking a stroll in the Sonoran Desert town of Ajo, Arizona,
WINTER EQUINOX SUMMER
can be a challenge. With that in mind, providing shade and an interesting walking experience seemed vital to Seana Cullinan WINTER
and Katrina Manis. Working with the
EQUINOX SUMMER
International Sonoran Desert Alliance, they designed a linear park for the edge of the town’s plaza. The land, which surrounds a former train station, will function as a paseo—a public walk—in the heart of this former mining town. Analyzing sun and shadow patterns was crucial to the design process. The analyses at special times of the year—the solstices and equinoxes, shown
4PM
to the right in plan view—revealed dramatic patterns, but few areas with consistent shade. The final design creates more shade and a setting rich in native flora.
Shaded gardens to the south of the depot provide comfortable gathering spaces.
18 The Conway School Graduate Program in Sustainable Landscape Planning + Design
N
0'
15'
30'
45'
NOON
/ PORT F OL I O /
PATHS FOR CONTEMPLATION + REFLECTION STOC KB RI D G E , MASSAC H US E T TS
Walkers at the Kripalu Center for Yoga and Health in the southern Berkshires of Massachusetts, many of whom walk for meditation, can have trouble getting oriented on this extensive campus. They also sometimes struggle at check-in just getting themselves and their luggage from their cars to the registration desk. Four Conway teams have completed projects at Kripalu, North America’s largest residential facility for holistic health and education, and each of them has explored means of improving wayfinding. Most recently, Shana Hostester and Katrina Manis created a comprehensive landscape master plan for this 350-acre site. Jamie Pottern and Carlos Wright designed a path down a steeply sloping lawn to a beautiful lake. As seen in the cross sections below, they also brought fresh thinking to facilitate pedestrians’ enjoyment of the retreat’s treeshaded entry drive, which is now dominated by cars.
TRAILS FOR ENVIRONMENTAL EDUCATION VE R G E N N ES, VERMO NT
Laura Elizares and Jeanette O’Connor saw a tired hayfield and envisioned a
Adding a sidewalk
Narrowing the drive
Universally accessible trail created
Pedestrians get the drive
healthy meadow of native grasses and wildflowers, providing diverse wildlife habitat and a more interesting walk for visitors to the Willowell Foundation’s Vergennes, Vermont, environmental education site. Their plan includes two looping trails: a flat, ⅛-mile loop that sticks to the meadow, and a longer route, which traverses meadow, forest edge, wetland, and mid-successional habitat. These trails will create abundant opportunities for experiencing and learning about this scenic rural landscape.
A PASSION FOR PATHS
// To say that Peter Monro ’86 is interested in paths and path design is an understatement.
The Portland, Maine, landscape architect has designed paths and networks of paths and now has launched an authoritative blog—DesignForWalking.com—about the “principles and particulars” of walkways. His goal is to promote better design of walking paths. The observations and recommendations on his website are based on years of research, practice, walking and hiking, and even some inspiration from a talk he heard, while he was a Conway student, on how garden slugs navigate. Writing of Rousham, a small farm estate north of Oxford, England, designed by William Kent in the 1740s, Peter states, “It was as though here at Rousham William Kent offered proof that he understood the very fundamentals of human nature, the kinds of places we humans seek out for protection and comfort, the kinds of routes we want to take.”
//2013// con’text 19
Perspectives
Erik Van Lennep ’83 Creates a Living Lab for Ecosystem Services
Thinking—and Acting—Globally Ever since graduating from Conway in 1983, Erik Van Lennep has focused on international issues of sustainability. He worked initially with indigenous people worldwide as cofounder of the Rainforest Action Network and then founded and became director of the Arctic to Amazonia Alliance. He subsequently moved to Ireland where he cofounded the Cultivate Sustainable Living Center. In 2007, Erik established TEPUI Ltd., a consultation and design collaborative to research, promote and apply living technologies as grounded responses to climate change, beginning with energy, waste, and water issues throughout Europe. Now Erik is moving from Dublin to Barcelona, Spain, where the new Dutch NGO he cofounded, Circle Squared Foundation, will focus on restoring ecosystem services in Mediterranean climates worldwide. In addition to the Mediterranean itself, similar climatic zones are found in South Africa, Australia, Chile, and California. Erik Van Lennep The foundation’s focus on marine environments recognizes the important ecological and economic interactions of the dynamic interface of land and sea. “Mediterranean climates are among the oldest and most densely populated and are thus most degraded, so our
impact can be largest there,” Erik writes, adding, “There is much to be done to restore fisheries, clean up pollution, and develop shared management strategies.”
Mediterranean climates are among the oldest and most densely populated and are thus most degraded, so our impact can be largest there. In addition, Circle Squared will work on green infrastructure, carbon farming and forestry, and design and system learning. As with his prior efforts, Erik will build networks and alliances, develop metrics to evaluate measurable outcomes, and integrate systems thinking through regional centers of excellence. ¨
40°
15°
0°
15°
40°
Nearly all Mediterranean climate areas lie between about 15° and 40° of latitude. They are all near the coast on the western edge of continents.
20 The Conway School Graduate Program in Sustainable Landscape Planning + Design
Conway Currents News of and from the School
Left to right, Jono Neiger, Keith Zalzberg, and Dave Jacke work on their edible ecosystem teaching garden at Wellesley College. PHOTO: KIM ALMEIDA
FACULTY UPDATE
Regenerating Faculty Expertise
When Jono Neiger ’03 and Keith Zaltzberg collaborate, you know something productive is happening—often in the realm of edible forest gardens. But their recent work has involved campus design as well. Jono, Conway’s professor of regenerative design, and Keith, digital design instructor, are founding partners of the Regenerative Design Group (RDG), a Greenfield-based ecological landscape planning and design firm engaged by Wellesley College to design and install an edible ecosystem teaching garden in collaboration with David Jacke ’84 and Wellesley’s Botanical Garden. On a sloping half-acre site, massively disturbed when a new power line went in, the project needs to stabilize the site, build back the soil, and discourage the aggressive plants that would otherwise take over, while simultaneously establishing edible forest gardens that will become teaching grounds for students
of ecology and botany, as well as those doing independent studies. Though well versed in this kind of regenerative design, Jono, Keith, and Dave are students of the process as well. They are developing an educational prototype using QR codes at each plant which enable visitors—whether students, faculty, or community members—to identify the plant they are looking at on their smart phone and enter their observations. This interactive system will track and document pollinators, pests, flowering and fruiting times of the plants, and thereby create a useful database for further study. At Marlboro College, Jono and Keith are working at various scales to reduce mowing and increase habitat on the campus. They taught a class in ecological design process in the fall 2012 term, and facilitated a communitywide process to develop plans for the central meadow on campus. A former parking lot occupied by maintenance trailers, the area had been cleared, the soil amended and somewhat stabilized. RDG’s process identified wetland buffer
areas in need of enhancement and protection from human impact, while creating flexible outdoor gathering spaces to be used for teaching, performance, and open activity zones. Along one side, minimizing traffic and making it more pedestrian-friendly overall is the goal. A second class in the spring of 2013 focused on implementation, including planting meadow species. “The community has been very involved in the process,” said Jono, which is another goal of RDG. He stated futher that his involvement with varied projects, sites and clients deepens his experience, which he brings back to the classroom at Conway. “I can provide students some theoretical background, then illustrate it with real experience— this is how we worked with these soils, this community.” “It’s a really exciting time now,” says Jono. “So many people are looking for ways to create productive landscapes, to heal the damages, and incorporate education into the landscape.” And Jono continues to incorporate the landscape into his teaching.
//2013// con’text 21
/ CO N WAY C U RRE NTS /
NEW INITIATIVES
What Are College Students Thinking About These Days? BY PAUL CAWOOD HELLMUND Really important questions, if my recent trips to three colleges are an indication. This year I spoke at Hobart and William Smith Colleges (HWS) and Hamilton College in New York, and the College of the Atlantic in Maine. I consistently found highly engaged students and a lot of interest in the Conway School. In two of the talks I presented recent Conway student projects focused on
X
View presentation:
tinyurl.com/ Hellmundhamilton
food security, green burial, reuse of degraded lands, environmental justice, and
community development. The third talk was on my own work in greenway planning. The students’ response was tremendous. The audiences were large, and students asked insightful questions and offered comments from their own experiences. Following the address
Engaging Communities More Profoundly
In 2012, the Conway School launched its Sustainable Communities Initiative with a first focus on the Brattleboro and Windham County region of southern Vermont. “We are always looking for ways to serve communities more effectively through our graduate student projects,” said Conway’s Director Paul Cawood Hellmund. “With this initiative we are providing more continuity to communities and better feedback to the school.” As a part of this initiative, a Windham County resident attends Conway for a year, works on local projects at three different scales, and is committed to ongoing work in the region following graduation. Our 2012–2013 Windham County Fellow is Kimberly Smith, whose fall project involved seeing how See more on the the Harmony Lot, Windham projects: a central parking tinyurl.com/ windhamprojects area in downtown Brattleboro, could better infiltrate storm runoff and incorporate more planting areas for pedestrian comfort and community gathering. Broaderscale winter and spring team projects included a study of Working Woodlands in Windham County, Cultural Assets Mapping in Brattleboro, and a Village Center Plan in Wilmington, which
‘
at HWS, I found myself facilitating an open-mic session with the audience of one hundred. I encouraged answers from the audience given the knowledge and expertise right there in the auditorium. At Hamilton, students were keen to discuss planning solutions from conservation and ecology. At the College of the Atlantic, where human ecology is the single major, students were extremely savvy on the topics of the Conway projects and asked thoughtful questions about how the school operates. What a pleasure it is to present the Conway School to such enthusiastic and knowledgeable people, some of whom may someday visit our school.
22 The Conway School Graduate Program in Sustainable Landscape Planning + Design
suffered considerable damage in the August 2011 tropical storm Irene. Conway will continue this community focus in Windham County for the 2013–2014 academic year and is accepting applications for next year’s fellow and suggestions for possible projects. Contact Paul Hellmund (hellmund@ csld.edu) to nominate a region in New England or eastern New York as a future focus for the Sustainable Communities Initiative.
Major Donor and Board Address Education Costs You Can Help, Too
In September 2012, Susan Rosenberg ’95 decided she was going do something to help keep education at her favorite graduate school affordable. She issued a major challenge grant in support of the Conway School’s new Student Grants Program. With the same intent, Conway’s board of trustees voted the following February—for the third year in a row—not to increase tuition. More than $21,000 has been raised for student grants, enough to offer a needs-based tuition grant to four students in the class of 2014. This level of support is unprecedented at the Conway School and, along with keeping tuition from increasing, will go a long way to attracting worthy applicants. Conway admits outstanding applicants, whose backgrounds, interests and passions match Conway’s mission.
/ CON WAY CURREN TS /
Michael Yoken ’10 show alums the green roof he helped design and install at PS 41 in New York.
These high achievers know that Conway offers a program that meets their personal and professional goals and their learning styles. But in recent years, rather than go into substantial debt some have chosen other schools that offer a financial package. Conway wants to level the playing field. Qualified but cash-strapped students enrich the school’s classes and will return to communities where help is most needed to build resilience and self-reliance in changing times. The school needs your help in supporting more of these students. Please consider a donation toward this worthy cause. You can give by contacting Development Coordinator Priscilla Novitt at (413) 369-4044 ext. 3 or novitt@csld.edu.
REACHING OUT
Gatherings of the Clan
Regional gatherings of Conway alums and friends provide an opportunity to strengthen local ties, learn what other alums are doing, and extend an invitation for local citizens to learn more about this unique program. Three New York City-based graduates—Kerri Culhane ’10, Julie Welch ’11, and Michael Yoken ’10—decided that much could be gained from a Conway gathering in the Big Apple. So, they organized a two-day event in March 2013, starting with lightning talks at the Brooklyn Botanic Gardens (BBG) and a presentation on progress at Conway by Conway’s director. Robin Simmen ’01, director of GreenBridge,
a BBG program on urban greening and community gardening, spoke of her work there. Several alums addressed the impact of climate change on their work: Kerri Culhane works with the Two Bridges Neighborhood in New York’s Lower East Side. Kate Gehron ’09 studies salt marshes in anticipation of rising sea levels. Christina Puerto ’12 is developing computer models of coastal processes and ways to diminish wave impact in tight urban areas. Michael Yoken explores responsible construction on commercial waterfront property of Long Island Sound, given projected larger and increasing storm surges in the future. In addition to the talks about the impact of climate change, Jonathan Cooper ’10 spoke about his planning efforts that address issues of social equity and labor development. Later in the day, Darrel Morrison, a longtime friend and master teacher at Conway, shared some of his recent work, including a project underway at the Brooklyn Botanic Garden. The main presentation and discussion was about Conway’s progress and future prospects. Director Paul Cawood Hellmund described the tremendous opportunities Conway has as it moves into its fifth decade at a time of great environmental challenge. He pointed out that the diverse work presented that evening by alums clearly illustrated the important contributions Conway is making to the world. The second day of the gathering included a visit with Michael Yoken to a green roof he helped design and install at grammar school PS41 in the West Village. PS 41 parent Vicki Sando raised $1.5 million for the project, and is very pleased with Michael’s role, which includes teaching a class with the urban eco-club in the school. This was followed by a visit to the Cooper Union Institute for Sustainable Design, where Julie Welch, working with the Buckminster Fuller Institute, has been collaborating with Cooper Union’s Institute for Sustainable Design. Institute Director and Professor of Architecture Kevin Bone and Associate Director Sunnie Joh walked the Conway group through an impressive exhibit on modernism and sustainability. Participants concluded the day by attending an address by David Orr, Conway Honorary Degree Recipient ’06,
DESIGNING FOR SUCCESS Designing for Success: Ecological Restoration and Landscape Resilience is the theme of a major regional conference being sponsored by the Conway School, the Society for Ecological Restoration-New England Chapter (SER-NE), and other partners. The two-day event will be held at Hampshire College, Amherst, Massachusetts, on April 25 and 26, 2014. Aaron Schlechter ’01 brought SER-NE and Conway together to collaborate on what will be SER-NE’s first regional conference in New England.
The first day of the conference will include plenary addresses and paper and poster presentations. On the second day, participants will head out into the field to see restoration projects firsthand. Watch the Conway School’s website, www.csld.edu, for more details.
at the Parsons New School for Design. Professor Orr made the case for hope in the face of considerable environmental challenges. He warmly greeted the Conway contingent. Are there organizations or instituWant to support tions in your area a gathering in that are doing excityour part of the country? Contact: ing work? Volunteer Priscilla Novitt to host a gathering (413) 369-4044 novitt@csld.edu of alums for a field trip, workshop, or series of lightning talks. Contact Priscilla Novitt for a list of Conway grads in your region.
a
//2013// con’text 23
/ CO N WAY C U RRE NTS /
[ co nway ' s fo rt y- fi rst c l ass : 2013 ]
The class of 2013 headed to Cape Cod for the fall orientation trip. Left to right, Kate Cairoli, Noah Zimmerman, Sierra McCartney, Willie Gregg, Rachel Edwards, Beth Schermerhorn, Ken Byrne (faculty), Kimberly Smith, Jon Kelly, Emily Durost, Anna Fialkoff, Olivia Loughrey, Anna Best, Amy Nyman, Renee LaGue, Becca Robbins, Amy Wolfson, Judith Doll-Foley, Jono Neiger (faculty), Jessica Orkin
Partnerships in Education
Conway’s collaborations with other ecologically minded and educationally focused organizations bring new speakers to the school, expand Conway’s reputation through a network of activist organizations, and open up opportunities for its graduates. Speakers from New England Wild Flower Society, New England Farmers Union, The Trustees of Reservations, and Orion Magazine opened the fortieth anniversary celebration with reflections on Conway’s interdisciplinary curriculum. Each represented an arena in which our alums have found rewarding careers, whether in conservation planning, food security, native plant and habitat protection, or the intersection of nature, culture, and place that Orion anchors. This past year, Conway partnered locally with the Sunderland Public Library to sponsor a series of talks by writers whose focus on nature, culture, and climate change challenged the audience to reconsider their relationship to the earth and how we live on it. In October, Amherst College Professor Jan Dizard, a lifelong hunter and environmental advocate, explored
conflicts between restoring certain wildlife populations and our relationship with the “wild.” James Howard Kunstler presented a sober perspective of our future, a departure from the overly optimistic perspective of those who believe technology will solve all our problems as he describes in his new book, Too Much Magic. Charles Mann spoke to an overflow crowd in November, sharing his meticulous research on the momentous global biological shift that occurred post-Columbus, as beautifully written in 1493: Uncovering the New World Columbus Created, a sequel to his equally compelling 1491. The Ecological Landscaping Association, an expanding professional organization in New England and beyond, held its sixteenth annual conference in February 2013, and once again Conway was a sponsor. This excellent organization, which offers ongoing workshops and site visits throughout the year, also has an excellent monthly e-newsletter; Theresa Sprague ’08 has been involved with the organization for many years in a leadership role.
24 The Conway School Graduate Program in Sustainable Landscape Planning + Design
TRUSTEES UPDATE
Changing of the Guard
When Conway’s board of trustees decided in 2011 to establish term limits for themselves, they realized they would lose some valuable members, but gain greater diversity and expertise. At the time, the board of fourteen included ten men and seven alums, with three members who had served more than ten years. With rotation in office, the board is seeing more regular and self-renewing turnover, strengthening the board and the school. Among the trustees who have stepped down in the past year, three have given long and devoted service. Rick Brown served the school as administrative director for three years (1998–2001) before becoming an adviser and then board member (2002–2005, 2006–2012). His fiscal and administrative expertise guided the school, as he cochaired the Finance Committee and the Strategic Planning Committee, and served as vice chair of the Executive Committee. As Paul Hellmund noted, “Rick brought his considerable experience and an eagle eye to all things financial. He served with great devotion.” In
/ CON WAY CURREN TS /
2011, Rick assumed a new position as head of the preparatory division of the Mandell School in New York City, and it is with deep thanks and appreciation that we wish him well. A trustee for six years, Aaron Schlechter ’01 brought considerable construction knowledge as chair of the Campus Planning Committee. As a graduate of the school, he energetically served on the Development and Outreach Committee. Aaron is project engineer and environmental project manager for Cruz Contractors LLC, Holmdel, New Jersey. Landscape architect Susan Van Buren ’82 was also a trustee for six years. She served on the Campus Planning Committee and faithfully traveled to Conway for board meetings from her home in Baltimore, where she and husband Peter Van Buren ’82 run an energy auditing business, TerraLogos Energy Group. They were named “Contractor of the Year” by the Maryland Home Performance with Energy Star Program in 2008, and “2009 Green Entrepreneur of the Year” by the Baltimore Business Journal. Nitin Patel, founder and Chief Technology Officer of Cytel, Inc. in Cambridge, Massachusetts joined the board in October 2011 and had to resign the next summer due to work demands. Nitin was born and raised in India and brought important international and technology perspectives to board discussions. Joey Brode, who also joined the board in October 2011, stepped down in April 2013 for personal reasons. First introduced to Conway by longtime family friend Nick Lasoff ’05, Joey brought great sensitivity, humor, and focus to the board during her short tenure. An expert in finance and banking, Conway benefitted from her considerable organizational acumen.
New Trustees Bring Diversity of Expertise
Three new trustees have been elected to Conway’s board of trustees. One is an alumna and two are professionals who have long known the school. Mitch Anthony brings a unique combination of organizational branding and communications savvy that has already made a difference in how Conway positions itself for recruitment
and development. A graduate of Simon’s Rock and an early devotee of the Whole Earth Catalog, Mitch’s entrepreneurial spirit led him through a series of alternative jobs where he found his niche in advertising and design. He has worked in corporate, nonprofit, and media worlds with clients as diverse as Reebok, Massachusetts Chiropractic Society, and Bloomberg Television. His ability to ask the pertinent question rivals that of any Conway graduate. He is a brand strategist with Clarity, based in Northampton, Massachusetts. Kerri Culhane ’10 enrolled at Conway in the fall of 2009 with a master of arts in architectural history; her interdisciplinary work in preservation and planning already incorporated natural resource evaluation and farmland conservation planning as she worked with cultural landscapes and historic architecture alike. As associate executive director of the Two Bridges Neighborhood Council, she combines that expertise with a sensitivity to the social and economic issues facing this neighborhood on the Lower East Side of New York City, with particular attention to threats posed by climate change such as sea-level change. See more about her work in Paul Hellmund’s letter on page 2. Keith Ross has parlayed degrees in forestry and environmental law into a career in innovative land conservation. As senior adviser within the Real Estate Consulting Group of Boston-based LandVest, he focuses predominantly on conservation transactions of land and conservation easements, donations and bargain sales, fund raising, and family estate planning. His pragmatic experience in working with clients and donors makes him an exceptional adviser to Conway. A founder and former executive director of the Mount Grace Land Conservation Trust, he held similar positions with Massachusetts Audubon and the New England Forestry Foundation. He is also an invaluable adviser to larger land planning projects in Conway’s winter term.
Getting the
Word Out! Conway is always on the lookout for opportunities to get the word out in venues that attract the kind of applicant the school is looking for. To that end, Conway staff and alums have been exhibiting at a rich range of workshops and events, mostly throughout New England. From Bioneers by the Bay in August 2012, to multiple environmental gatherings in early spring 2013 (Massachusetts Land Trust Coalition, Massachusetts Association of Conservation Commissions, Ecological Landscaping Association, Sustainable Communities), Conway’s new vertical banner has anchored a table full of project reports, issues of con’text, and enthusiastic alums eager to talk about our unique tenmonth program. Christina Gibson ’12 took the materials to her undergraduate program at the University of the South in Sewanee, Tennessee, in April. Mollie Babize ’84 spoke on a panel about careers in design at Smith College. Are there exciting conferences you’d like to attend in your region? Might you have an opportunity to talk with undergraduates at your alma mater about Conway? Contact Associate Director Mollie Babize at (413) 369-4044 x5 or babize@ csld.edu and she will send you on your way with talking points. And the school will share cost of registration. Can’t beat that!
Associate Director for Admissions Mollie Babize at a conference.
//2013// con’text 25
Graduation Class of 2012
Class of 2012, left to right, Evelyn Lane, Seana Cullinan, Jamie Pottern, Molly Hutt, Jeanette O’Connor, Christina Puerto, Katrina Manis, Laura Elizares, Christina Gibson, Shana Hostetter, Carlos Wright, Rachel Jackson.
The Subversive Designer CO M M E N C E M E N T S P E E C H BY C A R O L F R A NKLIN
You are here because you are graduating: welcome to the “subversiveâ€? landscape design community. What makes you part of this community is that every project that you will do from now on, will be enriched with the new thinking you have gained at Conway. Let us remind ourselves of the old way of thinking: ƀLJLJ " LJ ( LJ#-LJ." LJ ! Ĺş ƀLJLJ LJ1#&&LJ!#0 LJ ,źLJ ,)1(LJ." LJ ' (.LJ,)- LJ! , (LJ." .LJ" LJ1 (.-Ĺş ƀLJLJ " LJ /#& #(!-LJ , LJ'), LJ#'*),. (.LJ." (LJ." LJ& ( - * Ĺş ƀLJLJ 3LJ -#!(LJ1#&&LJ' % LJ' LJ ')/-Ĺş Now, as we know, everything is interwoven—which changes the way we see and ." LJ1 3LJ1 LJ1),%źLJ LJ*,)*)- LJ.)LJ. % LJ3)/LJ)(LJ LJ$)/,( 3ŝLJ.",)/!"LJ (LJ#(0 (. LJ*,)$ .ŝLJ.)LJ deconstruct the reality of how you can never go back to the old ways. Let’s go to the site: A small college has been constructed on the top of a geological anomaly that sticks up in a flat floodplain and is surrounded by a forested river valley that happens to be a major city park. “Student lifeâ€? currently occurs in an immense asphalt parking lot and enrollment is down. The college is making big plans for the future, and they have asked you to design a master plan, which will accommodate, among other things, 1887 new bedrooms and 19 more classrooms, not to mention 3 new soccer fields. .LJ' % -LJ3)/,LJ$) LJ ,LJ'), LJ #ĹŹ /&.ŝLJ /.LJ )(1 3LJ" -LJ. /!".LJ3)/LJ." .LJ 3)( LJ." LJ client who pays your bills, your actual, primary clients are the larger natural world ( LJ." LJ&) &LJ"/' (LJ )''/(#.3źLJ " LJ )&& ! LJ*, -# (.LJ."#(%-LJ." .LJ." LJ )/( ,# -LJ) LJ college property are the boundaries of the project. What you know now is that these boundaries expand into the stream valley and into the public park, and to the village a mile away on an even higher hill.
26 The Conway School Graduate Program in Sustainable Landscape Planning + Design
Every site holds many stories. As designers, you will discover the stories that can solve real problems, satisfy the clients and organize the project. For a landscape designer these stories describe what the site once was, what #.LJ#-LJ()1ŝLJ ( LJ1" .LJ#.LJ )/& LJ źLJ " LJŌ,-.LJ story is about how the site evolved—its history. Part of the history is how, in the ŹŚŜŰ-ŝLJ." LJ )&& ! LJŌ&& LJ#(LJ." LJ1 .& ( -LJ and straightened the river channel. " (ŝLJ3)/LJ1#&&LJ" 0 LJ.)LJ 2*&), LJ1" .LJ the site is now, what are the big issues. For instance, student cars parked in lot # 3 are routinely swept away into the creek during heavy storms. " (LJ -LJ -#!( ,-ŝLJ3)/LJ (LJŌ( &&3LJ create the story of what the site will Ć’." LJ-.),3LJ." .LJ, -)&0 -LJ." LJ #ĹŹ /&ties and realizes the possibilities. You might suggest that the main parking lot become a garage, under the new -./ (.Ć?&# LJ #&#.3źLJ )LJ-+/ 4 LJ." LJ')-.LJ out of a tight site, every element must do many different jobs. You suggest that this new structure be built into the slope, so that the building becomes LJ-. #, - LJ.)LJ." LJ,#0 ,źLJ " LJ /#& #(!LJ (LJ." (LJ, *& LJ LJŌ .3Ć? )).LJ-.)( LJ1 &&LJ ." .LJ /,, (.&3LJ")& -LJ/*LJ." LJ"#&&źLJ LJ." LJ
/ G RA DUAT I ON /
flattened area on the ridge, which is also the entrance to the main college buildings, now given over to a service road, could be liberated by providing service through the garage, this landscape could become a student plaza, at the heart of the campus. We won’t go into what happens 1" (LJ- 0 , &LJ/(" **3LJ( #!" ),-LJŌ& LJ LJ& 1-/#.źLJ /.LJ-)' ."#(!LJ/( 2* . LJ and incomprehensible will happen at almost every job, so keep in mind that replanning is an organic part of the process. At every job there will be ,) &) %-Ć’ ,)'LJ ,źLJ ,)1(Ɖ-LJ()-. &!# LJ &#(!-LJ ),LJ." LJŌ .3Ć? )).LJ1 &&ŝLJ.)LJ3)/,LJ blunders with the contractor, or your sudden failure of imagination. You will have to be flexible, while remaining #." /&LJ.)LJ." LJ, +/#, ' (.-LJ) LJ3)/,LJ primary clients—the larger natural world and the local human community. (LJ." LJ ( ŝLJ." LJ -.LJ*)--# & LJ)/. )' LJ is that arriving at a successful project has become an organic process, in which you will have learned from the site and your client, and they will have & ,( LJ ,)'LJ3)/źLJ "#-LJ#-LJ")1LJ3)/LJ1#&&LJ create the future—where commencement means beginning.
Carol Franklin is a founding principal of Andropogon Associates, Ltd. and a fellow of the American Society of Landscape Architects. She is a nationally recognized expert in the design of integrated living systems and the firm that she cofounded with Leslie Sauer, Andropogon Associates, has been at the cutting edge of issues of landscape sustainability, biodiversity, alternative stormwater management, and global climate change. Her work creates a synergy between a number of different disciplines—science, art, engineering, architecture, anthropology, and economics, bringing a vision and a practical implementation of large-scale ecological concepts to each project. Carol has been involved with Conway from the early days of Walt Cudnohufsky, when she and Leslie Sauer made several visits to teach and give lectures. She is a long-term admirer of the special experiences that Conway offers and the exceptional students that it graduates, and has been a member of the school’s board of trustees since October 2010.
CAROL FRANKLIN JOINS DISTINGUISHED LIST OF CONWAY HONORARY DEGREE RECIPIENTS “As teacher, writer and practitioner, you have advanced a holistic understanding of landscape design that integrates ecological restoration with a site’s cultural context and historical significance.
t
See a complete list of honorary degree recipients: tinyurl.com/
conwayhonorees
Whether working at the scale of a local schoolyard or a highly degraded regional landscape, your whole systems approach exemplifies the best of sustainable landscape planning and design. In recognition of your many contributions, the Conway
School of Landscape Design, with respect and admiration, presents you this Honorary Degree in Sustainable Landscape Planning and Design.�
RE MA RKS BY KE N BY RNE , H U MANI T I E S P ROF E SS OR
Musing on the interplay of landscape, language, culture, and thought, Humanities Professor Ken Byrne finds comfort and solace in our ability to connect with surroundings as a starting point in the design process. But no brief summary can do justice to the subtlety and fine interweaving of Ken’s thesis.
Both of these stories tell us about the two-way movement between the composition of the world and the composition of our selves. Oliver Sacks’ story is about the intimate relationship of the forms of landscape and our ‘ ability to read and write. Guy Deutscher’s is Read Ken’s complete about how the structures of languages shape remarks: tinyurl.com/ graduation our ability to be attentive to different aspects remarks of the world around us, and remake it as we go. Neither story should lead us to believe that these structures are set for all time, that change is impossible. We have to keep faith in the plasticity of being human beings.
Left to right: Former Chair of the Board of Trustees Art Collins ’79 presents the honorary degree to Carol Franklin. Christina Puerto, left, receives her diploma from Evelyn Lane. Graduates Jamie Pottern and Carlos Wright.
//2013// con’text 27
Looking Ahead
Expanding Our Collaborative Network
Ec
DESIGN
l P la n ni n g
What will the Conway School look like in the future? That important question was actively discussed last fall during Conway’s fortieth anniversary celebrations. And it’s something to which the school’s trustees and staff have been devoting a lot of thought. Conway 4.0—that’s what we’ve called this next phase of the Conway story, and one of its key components is recognizing and strengthening our connections with innovative ideas and people. For that we need your help. There are plenty of central aspects of the Conway School that will never change, but in many ways Conway is always changing. It’s a new school every year: a new class enters and a fresh crop of innovative student projects is undertaken. Many in recent classes have wanted to work—both as students and later as professionals— on projects that deal with food systems and food security. Few designers were thinking about these and other topics until fairly recently. Regularly the aspirations of students and the requests Contact Paul: of project clients help guide what happens at Conway. hellmund@ csld.edu Looking back at the student work of the last six or seven years, three broad areas of design practice emerge: ecological restoration, conservation planning, and regenerative design. We often draw these as a Venn diagram. Where all three circles overlap is planning and design with a whole-systems perspective that carefully considers people and natural processes. That’s the core of a Conway education. But, graduating Conway students don’t typically encounter ads for whole-systems designers. (Someday there will be much more of that!) Thus we look to the broader fields of ecological restoration, conservation planning, and regenerative design—and the networks associated with them. These three domains have professional organizations and conferences, jobs boards, journals, and networks of colleagues, including other Conway alums. Connecting into such networks can be particularly helpful, especially in challenging economic times, not just for job seekers, but also for the Conway School itself. For instance, for twenty-five years the Land Trust Alliance has been working with land conservation professionals, volunteers, and supporters to protect land across the United States. Today, alums such as Art Collings ’95 work for conservation organizations. Art is vice president for Land Conservation of the Dutchess Land Conservancy in New York.
E nviro n nđ m
ta
Conway 4.0
g si
en
Conservation Planning
o lo gi cal D e
Ecological Restoration
Regenerative Design
Where all three circles overlap is planning and design with a whole-systems perspective that carefully considers people and natural processes. That’s the core of a Conway education.
f
40 The Conway School Graduate Program in Sustainable Landscape Planning + Design
We tell Conway students looking for work in land conservation about Art, Dutchess, and the Land Trust Alliance. Similarly, we direct students to networks dealing with ecological restoration and regenerative design, including the Society for Ecological Restoration and regional permaculture guilds. The Conway School wants to strengthen its connection to the professional organizations that are working in these critical fields and more readily find appropriate projects that will provide our students with meaningful learning opportunities and future work leads. These are things you can help us with. Who are the people—prospective project clients, applicants, advisers—and organizations you think should be part of Conway 4.0? Let me hear from you: hellmund@csld.edu.
BY PAU L C AWOOD H E L L MU N D
F ROM T H E C H A I R
On Acting Before It’s Too Late
PHOTO: RACHEL EDWARDS
Conway is fast-tracking designers and planners to deal with
Since the start of the school, a Conway education has been
change and uncertainty. A Conway education is for tomorrow,
a partnership between students and faculty, but also between
not just for today, and it’s certainly not about last year. The
outside supporters and the school. Donors, like you—some
school is nimble and responsive, in large part because its teach-
of them Conway alums, many not—have not only ensured the
¿
Support Conway’s Annual Fund
csld.edu/giving
ing is grounded in reality: real projects for
health of the school as a vital teaching institution, but also your
real clients with real needs.
gifts, large and small, have allowed us to keep tuition afford-
Our students are on a mission to learn
able. In fact, while other schools have been forced to continue
whatever it takes to make a better world.
raising tuition, we have keep ours level for three years, in effect
They’re also lifelong learners, so just like you,
reducing the real cost of a Conway education.
they keep on being inquisitive, long after
If you haven’t done so already, please show your support for
their time at Conway. They know that with every project there
inquisitive Conway students, who are eager to make a differ-
are important, new things to learn, and some things need to be
ence, because the world needs them before it’s too late.
learned in a hurry. They feel an urgency—as do we all—with daily reports of shifts in climate and population. The dramatic effects of these shifts are felt along coastlines and even far from them.
VIRGINIA SULLIVAN ’86
There’s a pressing need to act before it’s too late.
Chair, Conway School Board of Trustees
the
Graduate Program in Sustainable Landscape Planning + Design
ConwaySchool 332 South Deerfield Road, PO Box 179 Conway, MA 01341 ADDRESS SERVICE REQUESTED
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