Mission


The mission of the Landscape Architecture Foundation is to support the preservation, improvement and enhancement of the environment.


A Declaration of Concern


On June 1 and 2, 1966, at Independence Hall in Philadelphia, a small group of landscape architects who share a concern for the quality of the American environment and its future were assembled by the Landscape Architecture Foundation. This is their declaration:

We urge a new, collaborative effort to improve the American environment and to train a new generation of Americans equipped by education, inspiring example and improved organizations to help create that environment.

A sense of crisis has brought us together. What is merely offensive or disturbing today threatens life itself tomorrow. We are concerned over misuse of the environment and development which has lost all contact with the basic processes of nature. Lake Erie is becoming septic, New York City is short of water, the Delaware River is infused with salt, the Potomac River with sewage and silt. Air is polluted in major cities and their citizens breathe and see with difficulty. Most urban Americans are being separated from visual and physical contact with nature in any form. All too soon life in such polluted environments will be the national human experience.

There is no "single solution" but groups of solutions carefully related one to another. There is no one-shot cure, nor single-purpose panacea, but the need for collaborative solutions. A key to solving the environmental crisis comes from the field of landscape architecture, a profession dealing with the interdependence of environmental processes.

Man is not free of nature's demands, but becomes more dependent upon nature. Natural resources are where they are -- not where we wish them to be. Those who plan for the future must understand natural resources and processes. These are the basis of life and the prerequisite for planning the good life. They must know geology, physiography, climatology, ecology to know why the world's physical features are where they are; and why plants, animals and man flourish in some places and not in others. Once they understand landscape capabilities -- the "where" and "why" of environment, the determinants of change -- they can then interpret the landscape correctly. Only then are they qualified to plan and design the environment.

Like the architect, the landscape architect practices an historic art. However, the landscape architect is uniquely rooted in the natural sciences. He is essential in maintaining the vital connection between man and nature.

The demand for better resource planning and design is expanding... Today's demands require far more landscape architects than are available. Schools are expanding, as are the ranks of practitioners, but they are stretched thin. The gap between demand and supply widens. The environment is being built hastily and too often without such professional advice or help. In the process, far too much is damaged beyond recall.

The solution of the environmental crisis demands the skills of many professions. So that the landscape architects may make their vital contribution, we propose a four-point program to bridge the gap between knowledge and practice: (1) recruitment, (2) education, (3) research and (4) a nationwide system for communicating the results of research, example and good practice. Its purpose is to multiply the effectiveness of the limited number of landscape architects, while producing more trained people to cope with the future environment. We pledge our services. We seek help from those who share our concern.

Campbell Miller
Grady Clay
Ian L. McHarg
Charles R. Hammond
George E. Patton
John O. Simonds


Vision


LAF will be a catalyst for change, and an active participant and leader of a new collaborative effort to improve the American environment. LAF envisions an American environment where:

  • A strong sense of place is evident in community development
  • Development is integrated more sensitively into the natural environment
  • People live and work in quality safe and healthy environments, and participate actively in decisions that affect their physical surroundings
  • Greater understanding and respect for natural systems lead to more holistic environmental policies and programs

In order to achieve this vision, LAF has undertaken the following programs and initiatives.


Programs & Initiatives


With the exception of the scholarship program, which has been improved and expanded, the following programs respond to a 1997 feasibility study and have been established since 1998. We encourage you to explore the following links to our signature programs and invite any questions you may have about LAF, or how you can become involved.

Land and Community Design Case Study Series
The Land and Community Design Case Study Series, which documents innovative projects and analyzes contemporary topics, is enabling landscape planners to meet the public's demand for more livable communities by enhancing their skills and knowledge base, informing public policy, and providing material for professional and public education.

Landscape Futures Initiative
The Landscape Futures Initiative is analyzing how the landscape planning professions need to respond to global landscape change through a series of symposia, and will facilitate the collaborative development of a plan for the future of the profession.

Leadership in Landscape Scholarship Program
LAF's Leadership in Landscape Scholarship Program continues to grow and encourage high quality students, with approximately $100,000 in student awards available next year- a five-fold increase since 2004. Over the past two decades, the program has awarded over $675,000 to almost 400 students.

Career Information and Recruitment
The www.laprofession.org website serves as resource for high school and college students and professionals considering a career change to learn about the landscape architecture profession. The website includes information on project types and examples of each project type, employment in the professional, academic, government and nonprofit sectors, job outlook and salary, accredited landscape architectural departments, and scholarships. This website has averaged more than 11,000 visitors over the past year.

American Landscape Fund
The American Landscape Fund provides funding for the foundation's initiatives through the support of many individuals, firms and suppliers who provide generous gifts annually. These donors form a special community of people who have made a significant commitment to advance the work of the Landscape Architecture Foundation. The generosity of this group provides us with the core financial support we need to fulfill our mission to preserve, improve and enhance the environment.


 
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