Mar 28, 2024  
2012-2013 CU Denver Catalog 
    
2012-2013 CU Denver Catalog [ARCHIVED CATALOG]

Landscape Architecture


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Chair:
Ann Komara
Associate Chair: Lori Catalano, 303-352-3613
Office: CU Denver Building 330
Telephone: 303-556-3382
Fax: 303-556-3687

Faculty

 
Professor:
Lois A. Brink, MLA, University of Pennsylvania
 
Associate Professor:
*Ann Komara, MLA, M Arch Hist, University of Virginia
 
Assistant Professors:
Jody Beck, PhD, University of Pennsylvania
Joern Langhorst, Diploma, University of Hannover
 
Senior Instructors:
Lori Catalano, MLA, University of Pennsylvania
*Charles Chase, MA, University of Colorado
*David Kahn, MLA, MArch, University of California, Berkeley
Anthony R. Mazzeo, MLA, University of Pennsylvania
 
Instructors:
*Brian Cook, MLA, University of Colorado Denver
Emmanuel Didier, MArch, MLA, University of Virginia
*Kathleen Kambic, MArch, MLA, University of Virginia
*John Lanterman, MLA, University of Colorado
Heath Mizer, MLA, Harvard University
Leila Tolderlund, MLA, University of Colorado

Additional information about faculty in this department is available online here.

*Teach in the undergraduate Landscape Studies program.

 

Mission

Landscape architects articulate and design physical spaces supporting healthy, ethical relationships between people, place, and resources while enhancing the inherent qualities of that place. One hundred and fifty years ago our profession rose to meet challenges presented in a rapidly changing industrializing world. Today, pressures of globalization, unprecedented growth, loss of heritage, disconnection between people and the natural environment,and environmental degradation require our design profession to bring the art and science, and the integrity of landscape architecture to bear on issues requiring designs for environmental and cultural solutions.

We educate landscape architects to lead the design and planning process. The fundamental goal of our program is providing students with physical design tools and an ethic of responsibility grounded in natural systems and processes that allows them to connect people to place in ways that enhance well-being and environmental balance. Our educational program operates fluidly in both local and global contexts; design solutions are applied and evaluated at multiple scales. Our curriculum teaches our students to develop design and planning skills that use technologies and design approaches to enhance community, foster equity, remediate environmental balance, conserve and regenerate resources, and create places that hold value for current and future generations.   

 

People Place Resources
Culture Aesthetics Land
Heritage Settlement Water
Values Ecologies Infrastructure
Community Systems Economies


 

Program Objectives

The department has developed five broad program objectives in support of our mission. These objectives describe what students should know and be able to do by the time they graduate and are linked to a series of measurable student learning outcomes. The four specific educational objectives are: 

  • Design: Students will be able to formulate questions and arguments about landscape and its role as a significant cultural medium, and determine processes and practices that lead to transformative actions based on ethical, communicative and content knowledge criteria.
  • Communication and Representation: Students will be able to speak, write, create and employ appropriate representational media to effectively convey ideas on subject matter contained in the professional curriculum to a variety of audiences. 
  • Professional Ethics: Students will be able to critically evaluate local and global ramifications of social issues, diverse cultures, economic and ecological systems and professional practice as guiding principles for design thinking and implementation.
  • Content Knowledge: Students will be able to develop a critical understanding, and application, of the histories, theories and practices of landscape architecture and its role in reflecting and shaping culture and environments.
  • Research: Students will be able to develop and apply a diligent, systematic and critical inquiry in support of design and scholarship.

 

 

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