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Focal Areas

Ecological Infrastructure

Culturally-Based Place Making

Design for Ecological Literacy

Human and Environmental Health

DEPARTMENT HISTORY

The Department of Landscape Architecture was officially founded in 1969 by Professor Richard Haag, although a BLA curriculum had been offered in the College of Architecture and Urban Planning (CAUP) throughout the preceding decade.

Professor Haag served as the Department's first Chair. In 1970 this position was assumed by Professor Robert Buchanan who came to the UW from UC Berkeley and served as Chair for 10 years. He was succeeded by Professor Sally Schauman in 1982. Professor Schauman had been head landscape architect with the USDA Soil Conservation Service. She served as Chair for 12 years. Subsequent Chairs, Professors David Streatfield and Iain Robertson , have been appointed from the Department's senior faculty. Fritz Wagner, Ph.D., is the present chair. He served as the Dean of the College of Urban & Public Affairs, University of New Orleans, for 20 years. He is presently also the Managing Director of the Northwest Center for Livable Communities in the Department of Urban Design and Planning at the University of Washington.

Throughout its 30 year history the Department has grown and developed, adding an MLA program in 1979 and increasing the number of its core and research faculty as well as the number and disciplinary diversity of its Adjunct faculty who are drawn from CAUP Departments and other Colleges across the University. The Department's undergraduate and graduate programs have been fully accredited since 1969 and 1986 respectively, making it one of only 16 programs which have accredited graduate and undergraduate programs, from among the total of 63 universities in North America offering degrees in landscape architecture.

The growing strengths of the Department have been augmented by the development of College Certificate programs in Urban Design, 1985; Historic Preservation Planning, 1993; and Urban Real Estate and Development, 2000. The Center for Environment, Education and Design Studies (CEEDS) under the direction of Adjunct LA Professor Dr. Sharon Sutton have added further diversity to the Department's teaching and research opportunities.

Entry into the Department's programs is competitive and the caliber of our graduates is high. Initially the Department drew its students predominantly from matriculated UW students and Washington State residents and while this remains largely true of the undergraduate program, graduate students are attracted to our distinctive MLA program from across the country and internationally--with a majority of international students coming from Pacific Rim nations.

Over the years, the Department has evolved a distinctive teaching, research, and public service personality rooted in the landscapes of the Pacific Northwest. This identity has been invigorated by the region's dynamic history, its thriving socio-economic culture, and by the University of Washington's successes as one of the nation's top research institutions. The Department has forged robust ties with colleagues throughout the University and with practitioners and alumni in the local professional community to enhance its programs.

Under the leadership of Professor Schauman and Adjunct Professor Derek Booth, Director of the Urban Water Resources Center, the Department pioneered research into evolving areas of practice including wetland restoration and landscape planning and design for developing urban watersheds. In the 1980's and 1990's Professor Schauman has received NSF funding, and earned a national reputation, for this innovative work. Professor David Streatfield, one of the country's most highly regarded historians of the fields of Landscape Architecture and Urban Design, has developed the Department's Italian Landscape Studies program based in the UWs Rome Center in the historic Palazzo Pio.

In the late 1990's, The Department's focus evolved into Urban Ecological Design based on emerging teaching and research strengths and the urgent need we see in our environment. The Department is receiving increasing recognition for its leadership in this area and the use of innovative teaching methods in its studio courses, its research on emerging landscape design issues, and its community-building services.

Our research, teaching and service focus on urban ecological design is supported by a variety of activities including:

  • Culturally-based place making, through design build studio, cultural landscape, and community design studios

  • Ecological infrastructure through natural processes, ecological planning and design, and landscape technology studios

  • Design for ecological literacy in all coursework

  • Participatory design in advanced landscape architecture and interdisciplinary studios

With a core full-time faculty of 9, the contributions from a changing pool of skilled lecturers selected from the professional community, and over 15 adjunct and affiliate faculty, the Department is poised to build on its historic strengths in the coming decades and contribute to the landscapes and communities of the university, city, region, and world in innovative and engaging ways