TY - BOOK ID - 146891590 TI - A woman's perspective AU - Diedrich, Lisa AU - Harsema, Harry PY - 2023 PB - Ede : 'scape magazine, DB - UniCat KW - Women architects KW - Women city planners KW - Women landscape architects KW - Femmes architectes KW - Femmes urbanistes KW - Femmes architectes paysagistes UR - https://www.unicat.be/uniCat?func=search&query=sysid:146891590 AB - This issue of ’scape is about women’s perspectives – about how they approach their work as landscape architects, architects and urban planners. What motivates them, what concerns them and what attitudes drive them? In the dossier, we portray how Tarna Klitzner, Marti Fooks, Olga Felip, Sara Candiracci and Martha Fajardo design together with the natural world, and how they take the diversity in humans and their accommodation as their central point of focus. Visions don’t emerge in a vacuum, therefore we highlight some of the female shoulders on which they stand, and we shed a light on some exciting research that is currently being done on a critical topic that now begins to receive more attention and awareness: the link between gender and perceiving and behaving in the public space. Next to the women's dossier, this issue contains : a portrait of Terremoto, a young and quirky design firm from the US. Not sticking to any styles, methods or office hierarchies, yet functioning as a team in which each head acts according to both shared beliefs and their own diversity of ideas, Terremoto (Spanish for ‘earthquake’) stands for site-specific landscapes and ‘guerrilla-style’ gardening. Landscape architects Cannon Ivers (LDA Design), and Catherine Dee and creative director Jeroen de Willigen (De Zwarte Hond) share their Insta-inspiration. Also part of this issue of ’scape: reviews about how buildings and places with an industrial past are being transformed in a circular way into fine, surprising places to work, live and enjoy. We discuss five projects in which the designers and those involved have made something special out of a former industrial site. While retaining the right historical elements, they have created the right atmosphere, thus giving the place back to society while also striving while also striving to make the construction process as climate neutral as possible. In Pittsburgh, with Mill 19 a circular and unique meeting point for the neighbourhood has emerged; in Barcelona the project Vallcarca Next initiated a new life for an old cement factory; in Lyon an industrial hall became a parking garden; in Athens a former airport becomes a huge green park with a carbon-neutral design; and in Detroit degeneration is reversed by the creation of the public Core CityPark. ER -