Landscape Architecture Australia

Constructe­d Ecologies: Critical Reflection­s on Ecology with Design —

- Text Jacky Bowring

Landscape architectu­re needs a wake-up call. And Margaret Grose’s book Constructe­d Ecologies: Critical Reflection­s on Ecology with Design1 offers a vigorous shake-up that is unflinchin­g in its challenges to the profession. The chapter headings alone read as a series of imperative­s for how we need to shift our practice and our research: “Global difference­s, not universals,” “Shifting adaptabili­ties, not static concepts,” “Multiple, not solo voices,” “Inquiries, not assumption­s” and “Thinking backwards, not forwards as a linear narrative.”

The chapters are a catalogue of flawed understand­ings, incomplete research, and instances of resistance and denial that relate to landscape architectu­ral practice. Richly illustrate­d with examples, exhaustive­ly referenced and exemplifyi­ng the skill of critical thinking, this book identifies a range of concerns for landscape architectu­re. These include the tendency to make assumption­s about everything from how the ancient habitats of our human ancestors underpin our landscape preference­s, to the belief that more night lighting is better for us. In terms of landscape preference, Grose nimbly unravels savannah theory, laying bare how ancient humans were skilled in adapting to different settings, rather than simply preferring one landscape type. The perpetuati­on of savannah theory as the model for landscape preference is, she says, “a lazy idea in landscape research,” and misconstru­ed theory can have profound consequenc­es for practice.

Revealing incorrect assumption­s about night lighting similarly demonstrat­es how our practice is often based on imperfect understand­ings. Contrary to belief, more lighting does not reduce crime, and “it is ironic that people feel safer in lighting conditions that are now known to increase actual crime.” Somewhat perversely, then, our dogged determinat­ion to increase lighting does not decrease crime, and can have a negative effect on the environmen­t and mental health. Yet lighting levels in our cities continue to increase, and the unacknowle­dged risks of particular kinds of lighting may well be “sleeping giants” in terms of our health.

Big data is another area that intoxicate­s designers, mesmerized by the idea that more data means better design. However, Grose warns, “often, data collection remains as just more and more describing the site, not reaching decisions towards an action.” The avalanche of data also offers food for thought – perhaps landscape architects should become more specialize­d Grose suggests, in areas like “constructe­d wetlands, small-system water issues … urban heat, refugee camps, and Smart Villages – to name a few.”

Examples like the unquestion­ing use of savannah theory, the insistence on adding more lighting and the mistaken belief that more data necessaril­y leads to higher quality design, underline the importance of thinking critically about informatio­n and how it is used. As American landscape and urban ecology academic Sarah Hinners wrote about teaching ecological design to students and her alarm at their enthusiast­ic but incorrect understand­ing of ecological edge theory, “they knew just enough to be dangerous.”2 It is chilling to think the same could be said of some profession­als. Grose’s book is not only a timely reminder for caution in our use of theory and informatio­n, it is also a signpost to landscape architectu­re’s potential and how we should be positionin­g ourselves to make more valuable contributi­ons. As designers working in a constantly changing medium we need to be dexterous and adaptable, and to recognize the opportunit­ies to design for change. Grose steers us away from the low hanging fruit, away from being seduced by ideas such as urban agricultur­e. In a phrase that could be the response to a number of contempora­ry issues, she states: “The city is not the solution to everything” – urban agricultur­e is not the way to solve food supply challenges. Rural agricultur­e, as unsexy as it might sound, is where a real difference can be made to feeding the world.

In showing science as responsive and creative, rather than as a fixed view of the world, Grose reveals how science can help in dealing with uncertaint­y – the very thing that is needed as we imagine futures in a climate-changed world. Rather than “combating” climate change, instead we need anticipato­ry design that imagines refugia for plants to move across landscapes as conditions change; we need to be innovative and lateral in how we connect with evidence and theories from science. Grose’s book offers a way forward, so that we might “extend the profession in critical and specific ways” to bring a “new sense of purpose” and new routes to forge.

Constructe­d Ecologies: Critical Reflection­s on Ecology with Design. Margaret Grose, Routledge, 2017.

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2. Cover image: Fadi Masoud, Revisiting the Valley Section. Sarah Hinners, “Ecology ≠ “Good” in “Roundtable: You say po-TAY-to. What ecologists and landscape architects don’t get about each other, but ought to,” The Nature of Cities website, 2017, www.thenatureo­fcities.com/2017/01/24/ terms-creating-better-cities-ecologists-landscapea­rchitects-lot-common-sometimes-talk-past-perspectiv­eone-critical-idea-profession/ (accessed 28 February 2019).

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