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What Is a Wasteland?

waste-music

Waste Music Festival / Title Magazine

According to Mariana Mogilevich and Curt Gambetta, Princeton University Mellon Initiative, "the production of waste and the production of space go hand in hand." As landscape architects, architects, and urban designers remake our cities, waste is created too. Moving this waste shapes our urban landscape. Putting all this waste somewhere often means the creation of segregated urban wastelands.

As Mogilevich and Gambetta explain though, "despite waste's centrality to the design and imagination of cities, it is today understood as a largely technical problem about the management of its disappearance." On March 7, they will assemble a diverse group to look the opportunities in spaces "designed as waste or wasted."

Sessions will explore questions like: "What is a wasteland, and what role does design play in its definition and reclamation? What is the relationship between wasteland improvement and social and economic transformation?"

Speakers include landscape historians, architects, geographers, urban designers, anthropologists, and artists.

Along with the symposium, the team has put together a new exhibition called Tracing Waste, which looks at "artistic works that trace the movement of trash and sewage." The exhibition runs from February 23 to March 13.

The symposium on March 7 is free and open to the public.

And here's a symposium of interest to landscape architects interested in cutting-edge modeling technologies: Simulating Natures at the University of Pennsylvania, March 19-20. As the organizers ask, "how can we better engage the invisible biotic and abiotic interactions and flows that exist outside of human creation but can only be understood through our systems of representation?" Speakers include Bradley Cantrell, ASLA, Harvard University; James Corner, ASLA, Field Operations; and Alex Felson, ASLA, Yale University, among others.