Landscape Architecture
Cultural Landscape Theory
This guide helps you get your bearings in Cultural Landscape Theory before you start exploring the interactive timeline, framework graph, and concept maps.
Before You Dive In
- Cultural Landscape Theory combines design, ecology, and public life; it is about shaping processes over time, not static objects.
- Rough timeline: picturesque and civic landscape traditions (18th-19th c.) -> modern planning and infrastructure logics (20th c.) -> ecological design and landscape urbanism (late 20th c.-present).
- Start with the tension between visual composition and ecological performance; that split organizes most contemporary debates.
- Use Noosaga to compare frameworks by scale: garden/site, district/public realm, watershed/territory.
Key Terms to Know
Landscape urbanismAn approach that treats landscape systems as primary structuring elements of cities.
Green infrastructureNetworks of ecological systems (wetlands, corridors, permeable surfaces) delivering environmental services.
ResilienceCapacity of landscapes to absorb disturbance and reorganize while maintaining core functions.
Cultural landscapeLandscape understood as co-produced by ecological processes and human history.
Ecological restorationInterventions aimed at rebuilding degraded ecosystem structure and function.
Common Confusions
Reducing landscape architecture to aesthetics; ecological function and social use are foundational design criteria.
Assuming sustainability is a late add-on; climate and hydrology often drive the earliest conceptual decisions.
Treating landscape as empty background to architecture, rather than a medium that organizes urban life directly.
Recommended Reading
Design with Nature— Ian McHarg
1969Landscape Urbanism Reader— Charles Waldheim (ed.)
2006Recovering Landscape— James Corner (ed.)
1999How to Use the Interactive View
1
Explore the timeline
Open the interactive view and scan the framework timeline. Which frameworks came first? Which ones overlap? Where are the big transitions?
2
Read the articles
Click into individual frameworks to read what each one claims, where it came from, and how it relates to its neighbors.
3
Check the concept map
See how the key ideas within a framework connect. This is useful for figuring out what to learn first and what depends on what.
4
Test yourself
Take the quiz for any framework you've read about. It's a quick way to find out whether you actually understood the core ideas or just skimmed them.