A tropical corner of the Pacific 2,500 remote kilometres from New Zealand will be the new home for a distinctive Auckland building being demolished to make way for the City Rail Link (CRL) project.
Read MoreTantalus Estate is an established vineyard nestled in the idyllic Onetangi Valley, a world-class winemaking region situated on Waiheke Island, 18km east of Tamaki-Makaurau, Auckland.
Read MoreLandscape architects Place Design Group have created a master plan for a famous patch of wetlands, 12 kilometres from the centre of Brisbane, to be given back to nature.
Read MoreBjorn Low is leading an urban agriculture movement in SIngapore and spoke at the NZILA Firth Conference late last year about the emergence of “food deserts” in cities and how he is working to reverse the trend.
Read MoreKohimarama Yacht Club has been granted consent to build a new boat deck and pedestrian ramp at its clubhouse at the eastern end of Kohimarama Beach, in Auckland. What’s notable about that, project coordinator Hugh Forsyth says, is that the consent was granted non-notified.
Read MoreCall for survey participants - Landscape architecture has a range of skills and knowledge, some of which are shared by other professions. Expertise in Landscape Design is a key difference between allied professions and landscape architecture.
Read MoreTwo Panuku neighbourhoods have achieved a Green Star - Communities rating for exceptional masterplanning, a first in New Zealand.
Read MoreNg Sek San is driven by a belief that his work should reflect an egalitarian lifestyle and that trees shouldn’t make way for buildings.
Read MoreSitting on a former car factory site at the foothills of Mount Fuji in Susono City, Shizuoka is the Bjarke Ingels Group designed Toyota Woven City. The 70 hectare “smart city” is being seen by the Toyota Motor Corporation as a prototype town of the future, where people will work, play, live and participate in a living laboratory.
Read MoreInsects make up the majority of terrestrial species on Earth. There are some 900,000 species of insects known to science, including over 350,000 beetle and 150,000 fly species — and new species are being found every day. With numbers like that, you might think we’ve got more insects that we need. But that’s not the case.
Read MoreApproved by the New York City Planning Commission this January, construction on Snøhetta’s design for a densely vegetated and expanded garden at 550 Madison is due to begin this year.
Read MoreSea level rise is an imminent threat to certain areas of the Wellington Region, so how will locals adapt to changing landscapes – four university students from the United States are here to find out.
Read MoreWearing your food - isn’t that the ultimate in self sufficiency? Especially when you fertilise it using your own body’s waste. Landscape architecture professor Aroussiak Gabrielian has created the world’s first wearable, edible vest, which can grow a variety of fresh plants.
Read More‘Our Space’, signals the creation of a new meeting place for the community of Te Awamutu. Anchored by a recreation events centre and new library, Waipa District Council has provided a destination playground that supplements these facilities appealing to diverse age groups.
Read MoreAs a tribute to Danish author Karen Blixen, the architecture firm COBE has created a new public square and university plaza for Copenhagen.
Read MoreBoffa Miskell’s Waikeria Prison Landscape for the Department of Corrections picked up an Excellence Award in the recent Resene New Zealand Institute of Landscape Architecture Awards, Project Based Landscape Planning category.
Read MoreWe know that the effects of climate change on the Aotearoa New Zealand city will be the biggest disruptive event in the history of New Zealand urbanism.
Read MoreLAVA (Laboratory for Visionary Architecture) has released its designs for LAVA Life Hamburg, a 12,000 square metre, nature inspired learning landscape set to open in Germany in 2023.
Read MoreTransforming a ditch running through a paddock into a naturalised, meandering waterway complete with fish life, footpaths, terraces, native riparian planting and bridges had its challenges, Xteriorscapes’ Chris Owen admitted.
Read MoreA vibrant meeting point has been created for the the centre of Bath, a World Heritage City with an annual footfall of 24 million people, by landscape architects Macgregor Smith in a public realm upgrade.
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