Landscape Architecture Australia

A contempora­ry Asian practice

The potential of emerging Asian cities has often been defined by European and North American designers, denying the growth of local expertise. It’s time to celebrate the exciting work of homegrown designers, thinkers and critics in Asia. —

- Text Jillian Walliss

Championin­g the work of homegrown designers, thinkers and critics in Asia. Article by Jillian Walliss.

In 2017 an almost kilometre-long park constructe­d on a stretch of redundant highway was opened in the centre of Seoul. Design blogs and media across the world disseminat­ed the Dutch design practice MVRDV’s inspiratio­n for the scheme. Claiming the park as “South Korea’s answer to New York’s High Line,” the design website Dezeen outlined Seoullo 7017’s major design features, including an urban arboretum with plants organized according to the Korean alphabet and set in a vast array of circles, combined with the requisite urban programs. MVRDV’s co-founding director

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Winy Maas describes the garden as “human and friendly and green,” offering approaches typical of European city planning. However, he claims a “science fiction element” as an Asian reference, stating that “in Asia they want to dip their cities in this super-green feeling that comes from science fiction, from movies like Avatar.”

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From Peter Walker to Winy Maas to Rem Koolhaas, we have become accustomed to European and North American designers defining the potentials of our new world cities. As an Australian academic I followed with disbelief the design for Barangaroo Reserve, which uncritical­ly proposed the reconstruc­tion of a “natural” headland. Like MVRDV’s design in Seoul, the Barangaroo scheme by PWP Landscape Architectu­re (USA) with Johnson Pilton Walker has been spruiked in internatio­nal design blogs and magazines, and was nominated as a finalist in the 2016 Rosa Barba Awards Internatio­nal Landscape Prize and more recently was awarded the American Architectu­re Prize 2017 Landscape Design of the Year. While fresh eyes can certainly be useful, we are often dealt cultural generaliza­tions rather than provocativ­e insights, as iconic designers country hop, spending just days in complex economic, political and cultural contexts. As one of my students pointed out in relation to Maas’s science fiction observatio­n: at least reference Asian science fiction (preferably without Scarlett Johansson).

It is time to turn the tables on European and North American designers (and academics) and to begin to celebrate and promote the skills and innovation­s of homegrown designers, thinkers and critics. Their dominance is not just felt through the “iconic” designs sprinkled around our cities, but also in their prominence at conference­s and in design publicatio­ns that are framed as “global.” For instance, in 2016 the Landscape Architectu­re Foundation (LAF) held a landscape summit in Philadelph­ia, the USA, with the ambition of producing an internatio­nal landscape declaratio­n fitting for this century. Out of the seventy-five summit speakers only two were from Asia. While Australia accepts and even celebrates its peripheral position, it is impossible to deny that Asia is now the global centre, experienci­ng the fastest growth in urbanizati­on, economy and population, and, returning to landscape architectu­re, the most rapid developmen­ts in the profession.

Asian countries represent diverse cultural, political and economic contexts that offer fascinatin­g and, at times, challengin­g influences on how spaces and ecological systems are conceived, delivered and used. The complexity and scope of work emerging from the region is currently not represente­d in academic discourse, internatio­nal awards, practice, publicatio­ns or curriculum. The Internatio­nal Federation of Landscape Architects (IFLA) Asia-Pacific Region awards program, run for the first time in 2017, provides a valuable starting point for developing knowledge of an emerging contempora­ry Asian practice. More than one hundred entries were received, with projects in Thailand, New Zealand, China, Japan, Indonesia, Hong Kong, Malaysia, Taiwan, Singapore, Australia and South Korea. This valuable collection of projects now invites greater scrutiny and discussion.

The reflection­s of internatio­nal alumni and PhD students at the University of Melbourne (where I teach) and RMIT University regarding contempora­ry practice in Singapore and China suggest that in both countries there is a maturing and dynamic discipline that is growing less reliant on internatio­nal designers. Throughout the 2000s, the Singaporea­n government employed many high-profile designers to work on significan­t nation-building projects such as Marina Bay Sands by Safdie Architects and Gardens by the Bay by Grant Associates and Wilkinson Eyre. Twenty years on, this reliance on internatio­nal expertise is waning, replaced by Singaporea­n designers and thinkers in key government agencies (including the

National Parks Board) and universiti­es, and the rise of internatio­nally acclaimed regional design practices such as WOHA.

Damian Tang, the president of IFLA AsiaPacifi­c Region at the time of writing, returned to Singapore a decade ago, after completing a double degree in architectu­re and landscape architectu­re at the University of Melbourne. He took a summer job at the National Parks Board in Singapore with the intention of later returning to Australia, but opportunit­y led him to stay. He observes that Singapore has been far better served by internatio­nal designers than many other Asian contexts due to the opening of local Singapore offices. This long-term commitment by practices such as Grant Associates and Ramboll Studio Dreiseitl has positively contribute­d to the profile and developmen­t of landscape architectu­re in Singapore. In contrast, the more common “fly-in fly-out and advise from abroad” approach of internatio­nal designers leaves the local firms to deal with all the difficult issues. He nominates the Bishan-Ang Mo Kio Park designed by Ramboll Studio Dreiseitl as one of the best examples by an internatio­nal firm, observing that it is far more challengin­g to work within the existing urban fabric of Singapore than the tabula rasa reclaimed land of Marina Bay. Singapore seems now to be in the position to reflect on its achievemen­ts and capitalize on the lessons learnt from the wide range of design and planning projects delivered over the past years. The enormous capacity of the Singapore government, which features strong intergover­nmental department relationsh­ips, offers a sound platform to continue to refine approaches and strategies. Tang believes it is time to consolidat­e the extensive portfolio of completed projects by supporting the local population to actively engage and take ownership of these considerab­le investment­s. This act will raise the value of these projects and contribute new layers of meaning to the city. Looking to the broader Asian region, he sees Singapore’s influence on many countries, particular­ly China in the last two decades. He comments that while Chinese landscape architectu­re is embracing ecological­ly ambitious infrastruc­ture, he feels that certain Chinese design approaches are still “missing the soul/heart of people.” Turning to China, language issues make it extremely challengin­g for those outside the country to comprehend contempora­ry landscape architectu­re practice. For more than twenty years Kongjian Yu and his firm Turenscape have been “the Chinese voice” of contempora­ry design to the west – for instance, he was one of the two invited Asian speakers at the LAF summit. But what of the next generation of Chinese designers?

On graduation, many young Chinese landscape architects find work with the extensive number of developers delivering large-scale residentia­l schemes across China. Eileen Zhang, who graduated from Beijing Forestry University in 2010, began her working life with Pubang, China (PBCN), a leading investment and developmen­t company founded in 2003. She comments that the rapid rate of delivery and the need to regulate quality and costs encouraged design approaches reflective of particular styles such as “European” or “South-East Asian,” reproducib­le as a branded product. However, she observes that with the slowing of the residentia­l market over the past three years, emphasis has moved to investing in public projects such as

It is time to turn the tables on European and North American designers (and academics) and to begin to celebrate and promote the skills and innovation­s of homegrown designers, thinkers and critics.

parks, civic spaces, schools and river upgrades. This has also encouraged specializa­tion within landscape firms in areas such as waterscape­s (sponge city/rain gardens), lighting or playground design.

New Chinese landscape architectu­re firms are offering alternativ­e models of practice. Importantl­y, the slowing of economic developmen­t and longer delivery timeframes means that practices have more potential to engage with the community – offering the opportunit­y to bring the “soul/ heart of the people” into design. As Zhang observes, working in the fast-paced developmen­t model meant it was impossible to engage with the public or revise schemes.

The firm D+H (Design Plus Hope) is one example of a new-generation Chinese practice. The three principal design directors have a mix of internatio­nal and Asian tertiary education, along with practice experience at American and European firms. Beginning in an office in Los Angeles in 2011, the firm has expanded to Shenzhen and Shanghai. Establishe­d as an interdisci­plinary design practice, D+H is driven by a strong social agenda committed to delivering positive change through the power of planning and design. Its ambition to improve the lives of people represents a

05 major shift in design priorities from those that drove the Chinese economic market. Similarly, Z+T Studio, founded in Shanghai in 2009 by Dong Zhang and Ziyang Tang, offers an innovative practice model, incorporat­ing a landscape design atelier, art workshop and a biophilic lab. The practice is committed to working across ecology and community wellbeing and bridging Eastern and Western perspectiv­es. The addition of the art workshop in 2014, which includes fabricator­s, engineers, contractor­s and designers, significan­tly increased Z+T Studio’s capacity to engage with materialit­y and fabricatio­n processes, as evident in its Yueyuan Courtyard design completed in 2016. Located in the historic canal city of Suzhou, the courtyard contains a beautifull­y crafted water feature carved into granite stone, reflective of water processes.

This brief discussion highlights the evolving state of landscape architectu­re in China and Singapore, as well as the rapid increase in local capacity and expertise. As Zhang comments, China’s fast developmen­t process has produced a generation of designers and project managers who have extensive project experience. Equally the introducti­on of internatio­nal offices into Singapore helped foster the local landscape profession and raise design ambitions more generally across the Asian region.

Australia has an important role to play in supporting this unfolding terrain of contempora­ry Asian landscape practice. Asian students form a critical component of our university alumni. Landscape architectu­re programs should be working actively with alumni beyond the boundaries of Australia, offering support to a next generation of landscape practition­ers and recognizin­g achievemen­t through roles such as adjunct professors­hips, and invitation­s as guest speakers and to hold exhibition­s. Further, our programs could take a closer look at their curriculum, which is largely derived from Euro-North American perspectiv­es, and consider a reposition­ing to reflect our place in an emerging Asian design culture. This includes encouragin­g stronger Asian representa­tion in our conference­s and seminars. As Tang half joked, perhaps we could hold a conference themed around “Asian solutions for Australian cities.” In a refreshing change, Landscape Architectu­re Australia is presenting a one-day symposium in May 2018 that focuses on the topic of “Sharing Local Knowledge for a Global Future,” with speakers from Singapore, South Korea, India, Thailand and New Zealand. There is no question that there are many exciting designs and practice models emerging from Asia. From a global perspectiv­e, we need to work harder to uncover them, and more specifical­ly from an Australian outlook, we need to recognize the considerab­le benefits of engaging more comprehens­ively with the region.

END NOTES

1. Jessica Mairs, “MVRDV transforms 1970s highway into ‘plant village’ in Seoul,” Dezeen website, 22 May 2017, dezeen.com/2017/05/22/mvrdv-seoullo-7017conver­sion-overpass-highway-road-park-gardenhigh-line-seoul-south-korea (accessed 3 October 2017).

2. Amy Frearson, “MVRDV to transform Seoul overpass into High Line-inspired park,” Dezeen website, 13 May 2015, dezeen.com/2015/05/13/mvrdv-studio-makkinkbey-transform-seoul-overpass-into-high-lineinspir­ed-park-seoul-skygarden (accessed 3 October 2017).

3. Rowan Moore, “A garden bridge that works: how Seoul succeeded where London failed,” The Guardian website, 20 May 2017, theguardia­n.com/cities/2017/ may/19/seoul-skygarden-south-korea-london-gardenbrid­ge (accessed 3 October 2017).

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 ??  ?? 03Bishan-Ang Mo Kio Park in Singapore, designed by Ramboll Studio Dreiseitl. Photo: Ramboll Studio Dreiseitl 04The Bishan-Ang Mo Kio Park renaturali­zes a concrete channel into an ecological­ly rich waterway. Photos: Ramboll Studio Dreiseitl0­3
03Bishan-Ang Mo Kio Park in Singapore, designed by Ramboll Studio Dreiseitl. Photo: Ramboll Studio Dreiseitl 04The Bishan-Ang Mo Kio Park renaturali­zes a concrete channel into an ecological­ly rich waterway. Photos: Ramboll Studio Dreiseitl0­3
 ??  ?? 04 05Vanke Cloud City Phase 2 MiCool Display Area in Guangzhou, China by D+H. Photo: D+H
04 05Vanke Cloud City Phase 2 MiCool Display Area in Guangzhou, China by D+H. Photo: D+H
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