2024-03-29T13:18:27Zhttps://scholarsbank.uoregon.edu/oai/requestoai:scholarsbank.uoregon.edu:1794/201062019-06-12T17:10:42Zcom_1794_7553com_1794_7552com_1794_7550col_1794_10476
Scholars' Bank at the Knight Library
author
Shepard, Rebecca
2016-09-12T22:37:17Z
2016-09-12T22:37:17Z
2016
http://hdl.handle.net/1794/20106
To robustly implement low impact development
stormwater solutions, the University of Oregon
would benefi t from using a pattern language
approach to plan East Campus. Most stormwater
on the UO campus now disappears into pipes and
is accelerated away to the Millrace and Willamette
River. These practices exacerbate flooding,
damage water habitats and contribute pollution
to stormwater in the Willamette Basin, particularly
from streets. Without an integrative stormwater
management plan, the UO risks loosing the valuable
opportunity to change this age-old habit and use
one of their most abundant resources to create
a ‘campus water aesthetic.’ A series of design
experiments for creating stormwater infrastructure systems on East Campus were produced. Proposed
stormwater runoff management strategies indicated
what type of structural development could be built
and where. These six alternative designs were
evaluated against a set of UO Pattern Language
Standards and stormwater issues appropriate to
the design concept. The designs were evaluated
against a criteria and ranking outcomes were
presented graphically to visually show the
strengths and weaknesses of each design. This
was followed by a fi nal design critique for each
of the six-alternative design. The product of this
process was a set of Stormwater First Patterns
for the University of Oregon’s East Campus.
en_US
Creative Commons BY-NC-ND 4.0-US
Stormwater management
Campus development
Pattern language
Campus water aesthetic
Infiltration basin
Stream system
Architectural conveyance
Stormwater First
University of Oregon
East Campus
Patterns for Rain: Exploring a Stormwater First Pattern Language for Campus Development
Terminal Project
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
URL
http://scholarsbank.uoregon.edu/xmlui/bitstream/1794/20106/1/Rebecca_Shepard_2016.pdf
File
MD5
1f5b557b4d4ecd732bc0b95353f65d6c
78805918
application/pdf
Rebecca_Shepard_2016.pdf
URL
http://scholarsbank.uoregon.edu/xmlui/bitstream/1794/20106/3/Rebecca_Shepard_2016.pdf.txt
File
MD5
ee18138e3ca864179577f147595d5d68
207696
text/plain
Rebecca_Shepard_2016.pdf.txt
oai:scholarsbank.uoregon.edu:1794/263352021-06-14T07:22:39Zcom_1794_7553com_1794_7552com_1794_7550col_1794_10476
Scholars' Bank at the Knight Library
author
Alig, Sam
2021-06-13T21:02:47Z
2021-06-13T21:02:47Z
2021-06-13
https://scholarsbank.uoregon.edu/xmlui/handle/1794/26335
Homelessness is a racial justice issue, as well as a social justice issue, and finding
solutions to house the unhoused needs to be viewed through both lenses. Individuals
experiencing homelessness are not one homogenous group and seeing them as such fails to recognize the intersectional nature of people living on the streets and the disproportionate rate of BIPOC individuals experiencing homelessness. Landscape Architecture has been
slow to address issues around houseless populations, as homelessness is often seen as a nuisance commonly addressed through defensive design strategies rather than viewing
houseless individuals as stakeholders in the urban landscape that should be included. This work helps to expand how landscape architects address these issues through design and hopes to push the field in a new direction. Transitional housing offers a newer model of housing that is gaining traction in cities throughout the country and could be more widely
utilized to address homelessness. However, current models of transitional housing often
exist on the fringe of cities or within parking lots, erected as emergency solutions. This work seeks solutions to help integrate transitional housing into the urban fabric and advocates for transitional housing to be more widely considered by communities and local governments to help create a more equitable response to housing the unhoused, particularly for BIPOC members of communities. A literature review and recommendations from the Center for Active
Design to increase civic engagement in public spaces served as the foundation to create a
framework for the integration of transitional housing into urban spaces. This research focuses
on three transitional housing communities in Eugene, Oregon to provide examples of how
transitional housing can be integrated into the urban fabric in a way that is multidimensional
with greenspace and food production. The examples include innovative solutions to water
and sanitation in the form of anaerobic waste digesters that produce methane and compost
as byproducts. These systems are simple, cost effective and can be designed in a way that
adds to the vibrancy of a transitional housing community.
en_US
Creative Commons BY-NC-ND 4.0-US
Homelessness
Intersectionality
Landscape Architecture
Social Justice
Racial Justice
Transitional Housing
Community Design
Urban Design
Sanitation
Carving a New Path Forward: Advocating for transitional housing to help mitigate oppressive forces for people disproportionately affected by homelessness
Terminal Project
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
URL
http://scholarsbank.uoregon.edu/xmlui/bitstream/1794/26335/1/Alig_Sam_2021.pdf
File
MD5
517fdafc0c8bdbbe7eec029a39facb27
58037794
application/pdf
Alig_Sam_2021.pdf
URL
http://scholarsbank.uoregon.edu/xmlui/bitstream/1794/26335/3/Alig_Sam_2021.pdf.txt
File
MD5
4d7572272899443afe8aa2c8eefff80b
144549
text/plain
Alig_Sam_2021.pdf.txt
oai:scholarsbank.uoregon.edu:1794/201302017-08-04T23:02:43Zcom_1794_7553com_1794_7552com_1794_7550col_1794_10476
Scholars' Bank at the Knight Library
author
Megyeri, Krisztián
2016-09-15T20:14:06Z
2016-09-15T20:14:06Z
2016
http://hdl.handle.net/1794/20130
While bicycling is growing in the U.S., only 1% of all trips are made by bike.
Surveys reveal that up to 60% of the U.S. population is interested in biking
as a legitimate mode of transportation, but they are concerned about their
safety. Thus, in order to make significant impact, cities must go beyond the
bare minimum and invest in a complete bicycle network that prioritizes bike
safety. In terms of infrastructure, this means going beyond conventional bike
lanes that separate bikes from cars with a mere stripe on the road. Instead,
bikes have to be physically protected from vehicles with the use of Protected
Bike Lane (PBL) facilities. Because there are numerous PBL types with unique
characteristics, and because the employment of PBLs is still new within the
U.S., there is a lack of consensus on specific design standards and a lack of
guidance on choosing the appropriate PBL type. Additionally, as most PBL
installations will be retrofit projects, the existing street conditions (dimensions,
traffic configurations, street trees) have to be considered.
Thus, the objective of this project is to create a transferable tool that matches
particular existing street conditions with the most suitable Protected Bike
Lane type. To demonstrate its efficacy, flexibility and transferability, the tool
is applied to three case study streets in Eugene, OR. It is hoped that this tool
can contribute to the planning process by aiding in the Protected Bike Lane
selection process.
en_US
Creative Commons BY-NC-ND 4.0-US
Protected bike lanes
Cycletrack
Suitability
Landscape architecture
Design
Planning
Transportation
Safety
Fitting in Protected Bike Lanes
Terminal Project
Tk9URTogUExBQ0UgWU9VUiBPV04gTElDRU5TRSBIRVJFClRoaXMgc2FtcGxlIGxpY2Vuc2UgaXMgcHJvdmlkZWQgZm9yIGluZm9ybWF0aW9uYWwgcHVycG9zZXMgb25seS4KCk5PTi1FWENMVVNJVkUgRElTVFJJQlVUSU9OIExJQ0VOU0UKCkJ5IHNpZ25pbmcgYW5kIHN1Ym1pdHRpbmcgdGhpcyBsaWNlbnNlLCB5b3UgKHRoZSBhdXRob3Iocykgb3IgY29weXJpZ2h0Cm93bmVyKSBncmFudHMgdG8gdGhlIFVuaXZlcnNpdHkgb2YgT3JlZ29uIChVTykgdGhlIG5vbi1leGNsdXNpdmUgcmlnaHQgdG8KcmVwcm9kdWNlLCBjb252ZXJ0IChhcyBkZWZpbmVkIGJlbG93KSwgYW5kL29yIGRpc3RyaWJ1dGUgeW91ciBzdWJtaXNzaW9uCihpbmNsdWRpbmcgdGhlIGFic3RyYWN0KSB3b3JsZHdpZGUgaW4gcHJpbnQgYW5kIGVsZWN0cm9uaWMgZm9ybWF0IGFuZAppbiBhbnkgbWVkaXVtLCBpbmNsdWRpbmcgYnV0IG5vdCBsaW1pdGVkIHRvIGF1ZGlvIG9yIHZpZGVvLgoKWW91IGFncmVlIHRoYXQgVU8gbWF5LCB3aXRob3V0IGNoYW5naW5nIHRoZSBjb250ZW50LCBjb252ZXJ0IHRoZQpzdWJtaXNzaW9uIHRvIGFueSBtZWRpdW0gb3IgZm9ybWF0IGZvciB0aGUgcHVycG9zZSBvZiBwcmVzZXJ2YXRpb24uCgpZb3UgYWxzbyBhZ3JlZSB0aGF0IHRoZSBVTyBMaWJyYXJpZXMgbWF5IGtlZXAgbW9yZSB0aGFuIG9uZSBjb3B5IG9mCnRoaXMgc3VibWlzc2lvbiBmb3IgcHVycG9zZXMgb2Ygc2VjdXJpdHksIGJhY2stdXAgYW5kIHByZXNlcnZhdGlvbi4KVGhlIExpYnJhcmllcyB3aWxsIG1ha2UgYSBnb29kIGZhaXRoIGVmZm9ydCB0byBwcmVzZXJ2ZSBhbmQgZGlzdHJpYnV0ZQp0aGlzIHN1Ym1pc3Npb24uICBJbiB0aGUgZXZlbnQgdGhhdCB0aGUgTGlicmFyaWVzIGFyZSB1bmFibGUgdG8gY29udGludWUKdG8gbWFpbnRhaW4gdGhpcyBzdWJtaXNzaW9uIGFzIHBhcnQgb2YgdGhlIGluc3RpdHV0aW9uYWwgcmVwb3NpdG9yeSwKdGhlIExpYnJhcmllcyByZXNlcnZlIHRoZSByaWdodCB0byByZXR1cm4gdGhlIGNvbnRlbnQgdG8gdGhlIHN1Ym1pdHRpbmcKZGVwYXJ0bWVudHMvdW5pdHMvaW5kaXZpZHVhbHMuIElmIHRoZSBlbnRpdHkgaXMgbm8gbG9uZ2VyIGluIGV4aXN0ZW5jZSwKb3IgaWYgdGhlIGluZGl2aWR1YWwgaXMgdW50cmFjZWFibGUsIHRoZSBMaWJyYXJpZXMgd2lsbCBhcnJhbmdlIHRvIGhhdmUKdGhlIG1hdGVyaWFscyBhcHByYWlzZWQgYW5kIHBvc3NpYmx5IGFyY2hpdmVkIGFzIHBhcnQgb2YgdGhlIHVuaXZlcnNpdHkncwpkaWdpdGFsIGFyY2hpdmVzLgoKWW91IHJlcHJlc2VudCB0aGF0IHRoZSBzdWJtaXNzaW9uIGlzIHlvdXIgb3JpZ2luYWwgd29yaywgYW5kIHRoYXQgeW91CmhhdmUgdGhlIHJpZ2h0IHRvIGdyYW50IHRoZSByaWdodHMgY29udGFpbmVkIGluIHRoaXMgbGljZW5zZS4gWW91IGFsc28KcmVwcmVzZW50IHRoYXQgeW91ciBzdWJtaXNzaW9uIGRvZXMgbm90LCB0byB0aGUgYmVzdCBvZiB5b3VyIGtub3dsZWRnZSwKaW5mcmluZ2UgdXBvbiBhbnlvbmUncyBjb3B5cmlnaHQuCgpJZiB0aGUgc3VibWlzc2lvbiBjb250YWlucyBtYXRlcmlhbCBmb3Igd2hpY2ggeW91IGRvIG5vdCBob2xkIGNvcHlyaWdodCwKeW91IHJlcHJlc2VudCB0aGF0IHlvdSBoYXZlIG9idGFpbmVkIGFueSBuZWNlc3NhcnkgcGVybWlzc2lvbiBmcm9tIHRoZQpjb3B5cmlnaHQgb3duZXIgdG8gZ3JhbnQgVU8gdGhlIHJpZ2h0cyByZXF1aXJlZCBieSB0aGlzIGxpY2Vuc2UsIGFuZCAKdGhhdCBzdWNoIHRoaXJkLXBhcnR5IG93bmVkIG1hdGVyaWFsIGlzIGNsZWFybHkgaWRlbnRpZmllZCBhbmQKYWNrbm93bGVkZ2VkIHdpdGhpbiB0aGUgdGV4dCBvciBjb250ZW50IG9mIHRoZSBzdWJtaXNzaW9uLgoKSUYgVEhFIFNVQk1JU1NJT04gSVMgQkFTRUQgVVBPTiBXT1JLIFRIQVQgSEFTIEJFRU4gU1BPTlNPUkVEIE9SIFNVUFBPUlRFRApCWSBBTiBBR0VOQ1kgT1IgT1JHQU5JWkFUSU9OIE9USEVSIFRIQU4gVU8sIFlPVSBSRVBSRVNFTlQgVEhBVCBZT1UgSEFWRQpGVUxGSUxMRUQgQU5ZIFJJR0hUIE9GIFJFVklFVyBPUiBPVEhFUiBPQkxJR0FUSU9OUyBSRVFVSVJFRCBCWSBTVUNICkNPTlRSQUNUIE9SIEFHUkVFTUVOVC4KClVPIHdpbGwgY2xlYXJseSBpZGVudGlmeSB5b3VyIG5hbWUocykgYXMgdGhlIGF1dGhvcihzKSBvciBvd25lcihzKSBvZgp0aGUgc3VibWlzc2lvbiwgYW5kIHdpbGwgbm90IG1ha2UgYW55IGFsdGVyYXRpb24sIG90aGVyIHRoYW4gYXMgYWxsb3dlZApieSB0aGlzIGxpY2Vuc2UsIHRvIHlvdXIgc3VibWlzc2lvbi4K
URL
http://scholarsbank.uoregon.edu/xmlui/bitstream/1794/20130/1/Megyeri_Krisztian_2016.pdf
File
MD5
c6fc3ef7a2c8080788998fde11370524
17749948
application/pdf
Megyeri_Krisztian_2016.pdf
URL
http://scholarsbank.uoregon.edu/xmlui/bitstream/1794/20130/3/Megyeri_Krisztian_2016.pdf.txt
File
MD5
cb855c4fddd8ed4d3b7b521a5e31193a
203826
text/plain
Megyeri_Krisztian_2016.pdf.txt
oai:scholarsbank.uoregon.edu:1794/285142023-07-31T23:06:03Zcom_1794_7553com_1794_7552com_1794_7550col_1794_10476
Scholars' Bank at the Knight Library
advisor
Ribe, Rob
author
Rycewicz, Audrey
2023-07-10T21:10:33Z
2023-07-10T21:10:33Z
2023-06
https://scholarsbank.uoregon.edu/xmlui/handle/1794/28514
0009-0009-5094-4935
This urban design methodology combines two complementary theories: the Triple Bottom Line framework and Urban Acupuncture. The Triple Bottom Line (TBL) emphasizes equal consideration of social, environmental, and economic impacts in decision-making processes, while Urban Acupuncture draws parallels between discrete interventions in the urban realm and the practice of acupuncture. The research focuses on Portland, OR, a city facing common urban challenges, including homelessness, safety, economic repercussions of COVID-19, climate change, and overemphasis on personal vehicles.
Informed by the TBL and Portland's specific issues, 15 goals were identified across environmental, social, and economic categories. Urban Acupuncture guided the translation of these goals into tangible interventions in the urban context. To select a research site, an overlay analysis was conducted using ArcGIS Pro, considering the following factors: street tree density, proximity to parks, the urban heat island index, and the vulnerability index. The resulting "Environmental Vulnerability" index led to the selection of a 5 by 5 block area in Downtown and Old Town Chinatown as the research site.
The research site is characterized by notable challenges, including a significant number of surface parking lots contributing to environmental vulnerability, low canopy cover (6%), and a presence of individuals experiencing homelessness. It also holds cultural importance, hosting beloved events such as the Rose Festival, Blues Festival, and Portland Saturday Market.
Based on potential use types, synergies, and conflicts among the 15 goals, six site types were identified: Ecological Landscapes, Blue Infrastructure Landscapes, Personal Vehicle Landscapes, Community Landscapes, Small Business Landscapes, and Residential Landscapes. Each site type was assigned specific goals, and the conceptual design of each site was informed by those goals. Placement of site types within the research area considered site conditions and opportunities. Each design was evaluated based on its effectiveness in addressing assigned goals and additional serendipitous achievements.
By adopting a district-wide approach and utilizing sustainable small-scale landscape interventions, the methodology aims to generate greater benefits compared to a traditional site-by-site approach. By considering district-wide opportunities and conditions, designers can identify site types that prioritize synergies among goals while avoiding conflicts. However, it is crucial to address the housing needs of the area, as neglecting issues of affordable housing and homelessness may undermine the effectiveness of landscape improvements in achieving triple bottom line goals.
Incorporating these findings and considerations, future urban design planning and design endeavors can strive towards creating sustainable, socially inclusive, and economically vibrant urban environments.
en
Creative Commons BY-NC-ND 4.0-US
urban acupuncture
landscape architecture
urban design
triple bottom line
Integrating Urban Acupuncture and the Triple Bottom Line to Revitalize Portland's Downtown Core
Thesis / Dissertation
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
URL
https://scholarsbank.uoregon.edu/xmlui/bitstream/1794/28514/1/rycewicz_2023.pdf
File
MD5
ea79560b97adf68d18934b6c57d488d1
43614026
application/pdf
rycewicz_2023.pdf
oai:scholarsbank.uoregon.edu:1794/246432019-06-19T18:22:57Zcom_1794_7553com_1794_7552com_1794_7550col_1794_10476
Scholars' Bank at the Knight Library
author
Hsu, Po Ying
2019-06-19T00:39:43Z
2019-06-19T00:39:43Z
2019-06-18
https://scholarsbank.uoregon.edu/xmlui/handle/1794/24643
In consideration of climate change and the increasing trend of extreme weather events, communities see more urgent needs for preparation,
especially for protecting their vulnerable populations. Given the growing climate challenges, this project aims to develop a design proposal
for thermally comfortable walkable and bikable street network within the vulnerable communities in Eugene, Oregon, to address the increasing
urban heat island (UHI) effects and heat waves.
The project first focuses on prioritizing vulnerable communities in Eugene through spatial analysis using American Community Survey (ACS)
socio-economic data and the UHI map. Using expert surveys and Garret’s Ranking Technique, 25 block groups were identified and prioritized
for thermal comfort street implementation. After considering the locations of vulnerable communities, I propose a city-wide thermal comfort
street network along with specific street design recommendations of four selected block groups based on the urban form types and demographic
characteristics. This proposal could help the City of Eugene to efficiently allocate its resources for climate change adaptation through
prioritizing vulnerable communities and implementing effective design interventions.
en_US
Creative Commons BY-NC-ND 4.0-US
Landscape architecture
Streetscape design
Climate change
Urban heat island
Cooling effect
Vulnerable communities
Pedestrian streets
Bike network
Pedestrian cooling
Prioritizing Underserved Communities for Thermal Comfort Street Retrofit in Eugene, OR
Terminal Project
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
URL
http://scholarsbank.uoregon.edu/xmlui/bitstream/1794/24643/1/Hsu_Po_Ying_2019.pdf
File
MD5
701defa725e9265509cc6b2796ff612a
73156476
application/pdf
Hsu_Po_Ying_2019.pdf
URL
http://scholarsbank.uoregon.edu/xmlui/bitstream/1794/24643/3/Hsu_Po_Ying_2019.pdf.txt
File
MD5
8046d1cc711317b84149363aea4467a5
93111
text/plain
Hsu_Po_Ying_2019.pdf.txt
oai:scholarsbank.uoregon.edu:1794/263392021-06-14T07:22:09Zcom_1794_7553com_1794_7552com_1794_7550col_1794_10476
Scholars' Bank at the Knight Library
author
Pauls, David
2021-06-13T21:31:39Z
2021-06-13T21:31:39Z
2021-06-13
https://scholarsbank.uoregon.edu/xmlui/handle/1794/26339
Effects of climate change in Oregon are evident in multiple ways.
Dwindling snowpack, hotter longer summers, and larger, more
frequent forest fires are among the most visible impacts of the
climate crisis. in Oregon. These impacts can be challenging, if not
impossible, for humans to perceive without concentrated effort and an
understanding of landscape systems. Climate change effects will be
most noticeable in the future as the forests throughout Oregon suffer
from more harsh and inclement weather. Thoughtful examination
of the relationship between forestry and logging is necessary, as
timber is one of the largest industries in the state and one of the
leading contributors to the climate crisis. The Anthropocene and
ecological impacts surrounding the new epoch will be primarily
understood through our senses. Artwork then presents a opportunity
for interrogating these issues in in ways that are more accessible and
instinctual than empirical data representation can be. Art doesn’t
explain. It interrogates, problematizes, speculates.
Aftermath uses artwork to problematize and interpret the traces left
behind from logging and forestry practices. Iterative research by
design methods was used to create a series of site-specific artworks,
each examining a different impact from logging. The end product is
an interpretive trail weaving through a private forest in the Willamette
Valley, featuring a series of 6 artworks interpreting and reframing the
forests of Oregon. This project promotes a dialog that explores our
society’s perception of forestry and climate crisis.
en_US
Creative Commons BY-NC-ND 4.0-US
Forestry
Climate Crisis
Climate Change
Land Art
Environmental Art
Anthropocene
Timber
Logging
Aftermath: Land Art and Forestry at the Dawn of the Climate Crisis
Terminal Project
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
URL
http://scholarsbank.uoregon.edu/xmlui/bitstream/1794/26339/1/Pauls_David_2021.pdf
File
MD5
8221d3d37dd6e711779917f29ce3fffc
89661854
application/pdf
Pauls_David_2021.pdf
URL
http://scholarsbank.uoregon.edu/xmlui/bitstream/1794/26339/3/Pauls_David_2021.pdf.txt
File
MD5
0d30cc63ba18416973ac67c6b0bf11d0
68633
text/plain
Pauls_David_2021.pdf.txt
oai:scholarsbank.uoregon.edu:1794/201272017-08-04T23:02:02Zcom_1794_7553com_1794_7552com_1794_7550col_1794_10476
Scholars' Bank at the Knight Library
author
Byrne, Kayla
2016-09-15T20:11:33Z
2016-09-15T20:11:33Z
2016
http://hdl.handle.net/1794/20127
The question I intend to answer with this
project is: Can artistic practice stimulate
the designer and the public to interact in
ways that will promote public awareness
of a local post-industrial site? The aim
of this project is to show the potential of
artistic practice to stimulate awareness
in the design of parks on post-industrial
sites. The case-study site is Alton Baker
Park in Eugene, Oregon a large park
with a layered and multivalent history.
Considering these layers of historical
complexity and the timeline of this
project, I have specifically chosen to
narrow this inquiry further by creating art
works that only reflect the industrial past
of the Whilamut Natural Area, formerly
known as the Day Island Landfill. At the
public showing of the created works, I
asked visitors to complete a brief survey
that focused on their experience at the
exhibit and their knowledge of postindustrial
landscapes. The results of this
project demonstrate how art can enhance
and sharpen awareness of post-industrial
landscapes while learning.
en_US
Creative Commons BY-NC-ND 4.0-US
Art
Landscape
Design
Post-industrial
Artistic Practice for Increased Awareness
Terminal Project
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
URL
http://scholarsbank.uoregon.edu/xmlui/bitstream/1794/20127/1/Byrne_Kayla_2016pdf.pdf
File
MD5
a6bf8d9c7cccebbe85eecd6efd945a59
7759704
application/pdf
Byrne_Kayla_2016pdf.pdf
URL
http://scholarsbank.uoregon.edu/xmlui/bitstream/1794/20127/3/Byrne_Kayla_2016pdf.pdf.txt
File
MD5
d733f37997d2e5e040b21a6909d8bc94
101265
text/plain
Byrne_Kayla_2016pdf.pdf.txt
oai:scholarsbank.uoregon.edu:1794/290552023-11-15T08:36:55Zcom_1794_7553com_1794_7552com_1794_7550col_1794_10476
Scholars' Bank at the Knight Library
author
Pierce, Abigail
2023-11-14T21:59:04Z
2023-11-14T21:59:04Z
2022-06
https://scholarsbank.uoregon.edu/xmlui/handle/1794/29055
Landscape maintenance is a largely routinized and
long-term process, and these qualities have the tendency
to render it invisible. And yet, if we are to sensitively and
meaningfully engage landscapes and the communities
present therein, an ethics of care for landscape
architecture is essential. To understand land care, and
its importance in this moment, it must be made more
familiar by enhancing its visibility, appeal, and power.
This project explores the concept of a maintenance
artist in residence, as inspired by the work of the
artist Mierle Laderman Ukeles. Ukeles has been the
maintenance artist in residence with the New York
Sanitation Department for 40+ years. Through empathy
and connection, Ukeles’ socially engaged art practice
lends visibility to the reality, necessity, and creativity of
maintenance work. The guiding question for this project
is: How can the Ukeles model of maintenance artist in
residence be applied within landscapes?
Using the framework of creative practice for this
inquiry opens the possibility of speculative design and
the generative potential of iterative design in relation
to practices of landscape maintenance. Four typologies
of maintenance art are identified through Ukeles’ work:
interaction, performance, documentation, and exhibition.
These typologies are then explored through a researchthrough-
design methodology informed by creative
modes of inquiry as detailed in Karen Lutzky and Sean
Burkholder’s “Curious Methods” and Tim Ingold’s Making.
Studying land care in this way will hopefully lead to
understanding its potential as a socially engaged, multidisciplinary
creative practice serving both the physical and
social infrastructures that require our ongoing attention. A
Maintenance-Artist-in-Residence could act as a living link
between designers, caregivers, and communities, while
increasing visibility and respect for land care, the labor it
involves, and the creative potential it holds.
en
Creative Commons BY-NC-ND 4.0-US
Maintenance art typologies
Industrial aftermath
Care-centered practice
LAND CARE IN THE EXPANDED FIELD: The Art of Landscape Maintenance in a Broken World
Other
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
URL
https://scholarsbank.uoregon.edu/xmlui/bitstream/1794/29055/1/Abby-Pierce-Land%20Care%20Expanded%20Field%20MLA%20submission.pdf
File
MD5
ec937d113d3c9294d51852db527fe10f
61625101
application/pdf
Abby-Pierce-Land Care Expanded Field MLA submission.pdf
URL
https://scholarsbank.uoregon.edu/xmlui/bitstream/1794/29055/3/Abby-Pierce-Land%20Care%20Expanded%20Field%20MLA%20submission.pdf.txt
File
MD5
1fffb662f484209e7ffca879f84c20d8
51973
text/plain
Abby-Pierce-Land Care Expanded Field MLA submission.pdf.txt
oai:scholarsbank.uoregon.edu:1794/246472019-08-08T21:35:29Zcom_1794_7553com_1794_7552com_1794_7550col_1794_10476
Scholars' Bank at the Knight Library
author
Six, Hannah
2019-06-19T01:11:44Z
2019-06-19T01:11:44Z
2019-06-18
https://scholarsbank.uoregon.edu/xmlui/handle/1794/24647
Portland Oregon’s Forest Park— one of the largest
urban forests in the United States—usership is in a
state of inequitable distribution, disproportionately
allocating “the benefits and burdens of [urban]
growth and change”.1 Geospatial and economic
transportation barriers in access to amenities exist
with a disproportionate impact on residents of color.
The embedded structural and institutional impacts
of inequity influence an individual’s transportation
environment and access to amenities.
The urban transportation system is in a state of
innovation and change. Shared micromobility has
quickly become a part of American cities, bringing
opportunities and challenges to an equitable future.
The introduction of micromobility, on America’s caroriented
streets create a tension between the benefits
of increased equity and burdens of poor network safety.
The disproportionate burden of poorly designed, caroriented
streets are majority bared by low-income
residents of color.
This research conceives of design interventions to
relieve the tension between safety and equity to procure
the opportunity for emergent forms of micromobility to exist. Providing space in the right-of-way to encourage
equitable and carbon reducing forms of transportation
can play a critical role in allocating open space resources
for vulnerable, historically left out residents. This project
examines the opportunity for shared micromobility to
bridge Forest Parks access gap. Shared micromobility
has vast equitable potential to strengthen connections
between economic centers of opportunity, amenities
and vulnerable residents. Aside clear potential, the risk
of othering and perpetuating historic and contemporary
inequalities exists.
john a. powell’s conceptual framework, targeted
universalism and belonging propel this project to consider
interventions that aim to disrupt and dissolve structures
of exclusion. This project uses mapping to understand
the barriers of micromobility, amenity distribution
and bike infrastructure. Politically and economically
vulnerable communities are identified and overlaid with
the geographic extent of micromobility trips informing
a proposal for a protected route—Forest Lane.
Forest Lane is a micro-modal transit route that serves
historically and currently marginalized communities to
belong and exist in Portland with access to Portland’s
beloved Forest Park.
en_US
Creative Commons BY-NC-ND 4.0-US
Equity
Belonging
Micromobility
Bike-share
Portland (Or.)
E-scooters
Targeted universalism
Forested-open-space
Transportation
Forest Park, Portland, Oregon
A Shared Belonging: Designing for Equitable Micromobility in Portland, Oregon
Terminal Project
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
URL
http://scholarsbank.uoregon.edu/xmlui/bitstream/1794/24647/1/Six_Hannah_2019.pdf
File
MD5
43f74fbbcba78dfe0df24c3a4fc5d8b2
65517530
application/pdf
Six_Hannah_2019.pdf
URL
http://scholarsbank.uoregon.edu/xmlui/bitstream/1794/24647/3/Six_Hannah_2019.pdf.txt
File
MD5
e9d67652769af8dfedef78c891fc891a
146261
text/plain
Six_Hannah_2019.pdf.txt
oai:scholarsbank.uoregon.edu:1794/202532023-10-10T21:22:46Zcom_1794_7553com_1794_7552com_1794_7550col_1794_10476
Scholars' Bank at the Knight Library
author
Tromp van Holst, Katherine
2016-10-08T20:04:53Z
2016-10-08T20:04:53Z
2016
http://hdl.handle.net/1794/20253
The purpose of this research is to document
the operational elements used to effectively
adapt formerly rural, urban cemeteries into
more multi-functional urban open spaces, with
expanded ecosystem and passive recreation
functions. The goal is to create a transferable
framework to guide the process of adaptation of
these cemeteries into community open spaces
that support ecosystem processes. This project
has two motivations: 1) the urban planning
problems of inadequate quantities of public open
spaces in some cities, and 2) some planners and
property owners viewing formerly rural, now
urban cemeteries as liabilities due to a lack of
perpetual care or the occurrence of anti-social
activities.
The method documents the successful adaptation
of Eugene Masonic Cemetery, and compares and
contrasts it with the Eugene Pioneer Cemetery.
Findings show how the Eugene Masonic Cemetery
site was transformed from an underused
liability to a well-loved community open space,
and what elements of its adaptation can be
included in a broadly transferable framework
to help other communities reach similar goals.
Specifically, the research shows how, through
sociocultural and biophysical interventions,
exotic invasive plant species were replaced with
a robust native shrub layer, and how this process
improved the cemetery’s appeal and the perception
of care within the adjacent community.
The processes used to transform the Eugene
Masonic Cemetery, and those used maintain and
manage the Eugene Pioneer Cemetery, inform
the framework for urban cemetery adaptation.
This transferable framework can guide managers
through the processes of evaluating sociocultural
and biophysical conditions, determining
desired future conditions, and determining how
to progress from the present to desired future
conditions through the collaborative creation and
implementation of a management plan.
en_US
Creative Commons BY-NC-ND 4.0-US
Cemeteries
Native plants
Urban planning
Adaptive reuse
Rural cemetery movement
Passive recreation
Ecosystem function
Transforming Cemeteries: A Framework for Enhancing Ecosystem Processes and Human Uses In Formerly Rural, Urban Cemeteries.
Terminal Project
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
URL
https://scholarsbank.uoregon.edu/xmlui/bitstream/1794/20253/1/Tromp_van_Holst_Katherine_2016.pdf
File
MD5
20b16114c60e9049eac0ae03348668fa
14872036
application/pdf
Tromp_van_Holst_Katherine_2016.pdf
URL
https://scholarsbank.uoregon.edu/xmlui/bitstream/1794/20253/3/Tromp_van_Holst_Katherine_2016.pdf.txt
File
MD5
a36f2a2ba1474a28f2a86fccd094c8ac
181505
text/plain
Tromp_van_Holst_Katherine_2016.pdf.txt
oai:scholarsbank.uoregon.edu:1794/261272021-03-25T07:21:54Zcom_1794_7553com_1794_7552com_1794_7550col_1794_10476
Scholars' Bank at the Knight Library
author
Lynn, Deanna
2021-03-24T19:04:03Z
2021-03-24T19:04:03Z
2021-03-24
https://scholarsbank.uoregon.edu/xmlui/handle/1794/26127
Landscape architects have the potential to contribute to climate change
mitigation through natural climate solutions that sequester carbon in
ecosystems. However, landscape architects lack resources on how to design
landscapes for carbon sequestration and, in particular, soil carbon sequestration.
I address these gaps by translating and interpreting the scientific literature to
create an actionable framework for landscape architects. The framework consists
of principles, strategies, and actions for design, installation, and management of
landscapes for carbon sequestration. A key recommendation is that increasing
the functional diversity of plants increases the potential carbon sequestration of
the landscape by increasing its productivity and resilience. Additionally, plant
functional diversity supports the soil microbial ecosystem, which is key to longterm
soil carbon storage. This framework emphasizes that designing landscapes
for carbon sequestration should prioritize belowground carbon dynamics and
the functioning of the whole landscape system.
en_US
Creative Commons BY-NC-ND 4.0-US
Carbon Sequestration
Climate Change
Landscape Architecture
Natural Climate Solutions
Complex Adaptive Systems
Landscape Design for Carbon Sequestration: A framework for design, installation, and management of complex adaptive landscapes for carbon sequestration
Terminal Project
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
URL
http://scholarsbank.uoregon.edu/xmlui/bitstream/1794/26127/1/Lynn_Deanna_2020.pdf
File
MD5
3dbad1cff0c8706ea4b54c9185eb3eee
15372276
application/pdf
Lynn_Deanna_2020.pdf
URL
http://scholarsbank.uoregon.edu/xmlui/bitstream/1794/26127/3/Lynn_Deanna_2020.pdf.txt
File
MD5
d2ff576fa492c0bbd2ff3fb3989583d4
167453
text/plain
Lynn_Deanna_2020.pdf.txt
oai:scholarsbank.uoregon.edu:1794/285152023-07-31T23:09:43Zcom_1794_7553com_1794_7552com_1794_7550col_1794_10476
Scholars' Bank at the Knight Library
advisor
Borden, David Buckley
author
Vierck, Ian Escher
2023-07-10T21:13:44Z
2023-07-10T21:13:44Z
2023-06
https://scholarsbank.uoregon.edu/xmlui/handle/1794/28515
0009-0007-3870-2971
Large Wood, Long Legacy is a series of landscape installations and experiences that explores the role of large wood in different ecosystems in Western Oregon.
en
Creative Commons BY-NC-ND 4.0-US
large wood
landscape installation
environmental interpretation
science communication
Large Wood, Long Legacy: Carving Timbers for Regional Environmental Interpretation
Thesis / Dissertation
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
URL
https://scholarsbank.uoregon.edu/xmlui/bitstream/1794/28515/1/vierck_2023.pdf
File
MD5
618a5c3ef435fa43b0f2a2a89cd7ed3e
44283492
application/pdf
vierck_2023.pdf
URL
https://scholarsbank.uoregon.edu/xmlui/bitstream/1794/28515/3/vierck_2023.pdf.txt
File
MD5
ca38d1383642937cc30dc0bfe695fe89
47151
text/plain
vierck_2023.pdf.txt
oai:scholarsbank.uoregon.edu:1794/263472021-06-14T07:22:19Zcom_1794_7553com_1794_7552com_1794_7550col_1794_10476
Scholars' Bank at the Knight Library
author
Sambo, Carmela
2021-06-13T22:52:54Z
2021-06-13T22:52:54Z
2021-06-13
https://scholarsbank.uoregon.edu/xmlui/handle/1794/26347
With the closest port of call approximately 2,400 miles away, the Hawaiian Islands are one
of the most geographically isolated and food-import dependent populations in the world.
The Hawaiian Islands imports approximately 90-percent of its food and energy making
it vulnerable to any natural or human-caused disaster that could disrupt shipping and
supplies. Urbanization practices in Honolulu allow for limited space for urban agricultural
practices, higher concentrations of people, and an increase in high-rise condominiums and
hotels. Most importantly, Honolulu faces an even greater loss in its historical agricultural
identity. Understanding the indigenous agricultural practices of the Native Hawaiians
along with what remains today is essential to charting a pathway forward.
The Native Hawaiians coevolved with their landscape and engineered a social-ecological
system, called the ahupua’a unit, that maximized ecosystem services. The ahupua’a
was a multifunctional land division that separated agroforestry practices in the forest
zone, urban agricultural practices in the lowland or plains, and aquaculture practices in
the coastal zone. Reflecting on the richness of this past system with the current design
and planning of Honolulu’s Ala Wai watershed challenges us to rethink new strategies
of implementing urban agricultural practices that raise indigenous knowledge while
enhancing Honolulu’s resiliency.
This research project is motivated by the ahupua’a model due to its multifunctionality
and importance within Traditional Ecological Knowledge. The three zones of the ahupua’a
model are examined using four selected precedent studies, ranging within the Pacific
Rim. Each precedent study is examined based on its use of Traditional Ecological
Knowledge (TEK) composed of local knowledge, resource management, and worldview,
and multifunctionality composed of production, ecological, and cultural functions. These
studies will help formulate a design framework that can be applied towards spatial
typologies within the Ala Wai watershed.
en_US
Creative Commons BY-NC-ND 4.0-US
urban agriculture
Honolulu, Hawaii
multifunctionality
indigenous knowledge
traditional ecological knowledge
The Future is Behind Us: Raising Indigenous Knowledge through Multifunctional Urban Agricultural Practices in Honolulu, HI
Terminal Project
Tk9OLUVYQ0xVU0lWRSBESVNUUklCVVRJT04gTElDRU5TRQoKQnkgc2lnbmluZyBhbmQgc3VibWl0dGluZyB0aGlzIGxpY2Vuc2UsIHlvdSAodGhlIGF1dGhvcihzKSBvciBjb3B5cmlnaHQKb3duZXIpIGdyYW50IHRvIHRoZSBVbml2ZXJzaXR5IG9mIE9yZWdvbiAoVU8pIHRoZSBub24tZXhjbHVzaXZlIHJpZ2h0IHRvCnJlcHJvZHVjZSwgY29udmVydCAoYXMgZGVmaW5lZCBiZWxvdyksIGFuZC9vciBkaXN0cmlidXRlIHlvdXIgc3VibWlzc2lvbgooaW5jbHVkaW5nIHRoZSBhYnN0cmFjdCkgd29ybGR3aWRlIGluIHByaW50IGFuZCBlbGVjdHJvbmljIGZvcm1hdCBhbmQKaW4gYW55IG1lZGl1bSwgaW5jbHVkaW5nIGJ1dCBub3QgbGltaXRlZCB0byBhdWRpbyBvciB2aWRlby4KCllvdSBhZ3JlZSB0aGF0IFVPIG1heSwgd2l0aG91dCBjaGFuZ2luZyB0aGUgY29udGVudCwgY29udmVydCB0aGUKc3VibWlzc2lvbiB0byBhbnkgbWVkaXVtIG9yIGZvcm1hdCBmb3IgdGhlIHB1cnBvc2Ugb2YgcHJlc2VydmF0aW9uLgoKWW91IGFsc28gYWdyZWUgdGhhdCB0aGUgVU8gTGlicmFyaWVzIG1heSBrZWVwIG1vcmUgdGhhbiBvbmUgY29weSBvZgp0aGlzIHN1Ym1pc3Npb24gZm9yIHB1cnBvc2VzIG9mIHNlY3VyaXR5LCBiYWNrLXVwIGFuZCBwcmVzZXJ2YXRpb24uClRoZSBMaWJyYXJpZXMgd2lsbCBtYWtlIGEgZ29vZCBmYWl0aCBlZmZvcnQgdG8gcHJlc2VydmUgYW5kIGRpc3RyaWJ1dGUKdGhpcyBzdWJtaXNzaW9uLiAgSW4gdGhlIGV2ZW50IHRoYXQgdGhlIExpYnJhcmllcyBhcmUgdW5hYmxlIHRvIGNvbnRpbnVlCnRvIG1haW50YWluIHRoaXMgc3VibWlzc2lvbiBhcyBwYXJ0IG9mIHRoZSBpbnN0aXR1dGlvbmFsIHJlcG9zaXRvcnksCnRoZSBMaWJyYXJpZXMgcmVzZXJ2ZSB0aGUgcmlnaHQgdG8gcmV0dXJuIHRoZSBjb250ZW50IHRvIHRoZSBzdWJtaXR0aW5nCmRlcGFydG1lbnRzL3VuaXRzL2luZGl2aWR1YWxzLiBJZiB0aGUgZW50aXR5IGlzIG5vIGxvbmdlciBpbiBleGlzdGVuY2UsCm9yIGlmIHRoZSBpbmRpdmlkdWFsIGlzIHVudHJhY2VhYmxlLCB0aGUgTGlicmFyaWVzIHdpbGwgYXJyYW5nZSB0byBoYXZlCnRoZSBtYXRlcmlhbHMgYXBwcmFpc2VkIGFuZCBwb3NzaWJseSBhcmNoaXZlZCBhcyBwYXJ0IG9mIHRoZSB1bml2ZXJzaXR5J3MKZGlnaXRhbCBhcmNoaXZlcy4KCllvdSByZXByZXNlbnQgdGhhdCB0aGUgc3VibWlzc2lvbiBpcyB5b3VyIG9yaWdpbmFsIHdvcmssIGFuZCB0aGF0IHlvdQpoYXZlIHRoZSByaWdodCB0byBncmFudCB0aGUgcmlnaHRzIGNvbnRhaW5lZCBpbiB0aGlzIGxpY2Vuc2UuIFlvdSBhbHNvCnJlcHJlc2VudCB0aGF0IHlvdXIgc3VibWlzc2lvbiBkb2VzIG5vdCwgdG8gdGhlIGJlc3Qgb2YgeW91ciBrbm93bGVkZ2UsCmluZnJpbmdlIHVwb24gYW55b25lJ3MgY29weXJpZ2h0LgoKSWYgdGhlIHN1Ym1pc3Npb24gY29udGFpbnMgbWF0ZXJpYWwgZm9yIHdoaWNoIHlvdSBkbyBub3QgaG9sZCBjb3B5cmlnaHQsCnlvdSByZXByZXNlbnQgdGhhdCB5b3UgaGF2ZSBvYnRhaW5lZCBhbnkgbmVjZXNzYXJ5IHBlcm1pc3Npb24gZnJvbSB0aGUKY29weXJpZ2h0IG93bmVyIHRvIGdyYW50IFVPIHRoZSByaWdodHMgcmVxdWlyZWQgYnkgdGhpcyBsaWNlbnNlLCBhbmQgCnRoYXQgc3VjaCB0aGlyZC1wYXJ0eSBvd25lZCBtYXRlcmlhbCBpcyBjbGVhcmx5IGlkZW50aWZpZWQgYW5kCmFja25vd2xlZGdlZCB3aXRoaW4gdGhlIHRleHQgb3IgY29udGVudCBvZiB0aGUgc3VibWlzc2lvbi4KCklGIFRIRSBTVUJNSVNTSU9OIElTIEJBU0VEIFVQT04gV09SSyBUSEFUIEhBUyBCRUVOIFNQT05TT1JFRCBPUiBTVVBQT1JURUQKQlkgQU4gQUdFTkNZIE9SIE9SR0FOSVpBVElPTiBPVEhFUiBUSEFOIFVPLCBZT1UgUkVQUkVTRU5UIFRIQVQgWU9VIEhBVkUKRlVMRklMTEVEIEFOWSBSSUdIVCBPRiBSRVZJRVcgT1IgT1RIRVIgT0JMSUdBVElPTlMgUkVRVUlSRUQgQlkgU1VDSApDT05UUkFDVCBPUiBBR1JFRU1FTlQuCgpVTyB3aWxsIGNsZWFybHkgaWRlbnRpZnkgeW91ciBuYW1lKHMpIGFzIHRoZSBhdXRob3Iocykgb3Igb3duZXIocykgb2YKdGhlIHN1Ym1pc3Npb24sIGFuZCB3aWxsIG5vdCBtYWtlIGFueSBhbHRlcmF0aW9uLCBvdGhlciB0aGFuIGFzIGFsbG93ZWQKYnkgdGhpcyBsaWNlbnNlLCB0byB5b3VyIHN1Ym1pc3Npb24uCgpQbGVhc2Ugbm90ZSB0aGF0IGVsZWN0cm9uaWMgdGhlc2VzIGFuZCBkaXNzZXJ0YXRpb25zIGNhbm5vdCBiZSB3aXRoZHJhd24KZnJvbSB0aGUgYXJjaGl2ZS4K
URL
http://scholarsbank.uoregon.edu/xmlui/bitstream/1794/26347/1/Sambo_Carmela_2021.pdf
File
MD5
140e184e3501db54d00f1723cdecebb3
29179032
application/pdf
Sambo_Carmela_2021.pdf
URL
http://scholarsbank.uoregon.edu/xmlui/bitstream/1794/26347/3/Sambo_Carmela_2021.pdf.txt
File
MD5
61359f39a95c7b720d437d9a0c70463e
117655
text/plain
Sambo_Carmela_2021.pdf.txt
oai:scholarsbank.uoregon.edu:1794/246502019-06-19T07:32:59Zcom_1794_7553com_1794_7552com_1794_7550col_1794_10476
Scholars' Bank at the Knight Library
author
Sund, Nicholas
2019-06-19T01:23:08Z
2019-06-19T01:23:08Z
2019-06-18
https://scholarsbank.uoregon.edu/xmlui/handle/1794/24650
As American cities transition from decades of automobile
dependency to walking, biking, and transit, new and
emerging forms of mobility such as ride-sharing, microvehicles,
and autonomous vehicles offer a new paradigm
of Transportation as a Service (TaaS) that has the potential
to drastically reduce the amount of space needed for
transportation and parking altogether—allowing streets
to become more than connectors between places, but
places in themselves.
However, suburban communities lack the necessary
funding to overhaul their sprawling transportation
infrastructure in the fashion imagined by today’s urban
planners and designers. Fortunately, the tradition of
Tactical Urbanism has already demonstrated how lowcost,
temporary interventions, such as parklets and
mobile food trucks, can adapt outdated infrastructure and
improve the usability of urban streets.
While Tactical Urbanism is now well documented and
even encouraged by municipal governments, its potential
to transform suburban streets remains unexplored
Following the decline of personal automobile ownership
in the suburbs, many forms of existing transportation
infrastructure, such as driveways, sidewalks, parking
strips, and roadways will either become obsolete, or
drastically change their functions. In either case, the need
to adapt this infrastructure can be effectively met by a
variety of existing and novel tactical interventions. To
that end, this project documents tactical interventions
in suburban communities and combines them into
conceptual design for a typical suburban street.
While tactical interventions can respond to unmet
social needs which have been overlooked by traditional
planning strategies, by demonstrating potential solutions
they also reveal new possibilities for urban and suburban
social space.
en_US
Creative Commons BY-NC-ND 4.0-US
tactical urbanism
suburbs
social space
Streets to Social Space: A Tactical Approach to Suburban Placemaking
Terminal Project
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
URL
http://scholarsbank.uoregon.edu/xmlui/bitstream/1794/24650/1/Sund_Nicholas_2019.pdf
File
MD5
6579c8dbd11da53d84a95dd75b538020
5011511
application/pdf
Sund_Nicholas_2019.pdf
URL
http://scholarsbank.uoregon.edu/xmlui/bitstream/1794/24650/3/Sund_Nicholas_2019.pdf.txt
File
MD5
7cbb8abe3c848b8139b4d8e12a8d2d2e
30346
text/plain
Sund_Nicholas_2019.pdf.txt
oai:scholarsbank.uoregon.edu:1794/263492021-06-14T07:22:22Zcom_1794_7553com_1794_7552com_1794_7550col_1794_10476
Scholars' Bank at the Knight Library
author
Craig, Amanda
2021-06-13T23:04:30Z
2021-06-13T23:04:30Z
2021-06-13
https://scholarsbank.uoregon.edu/xmlui/handle/1794/26349
In a time of environmental uncertainties, restoration efforts are charged with the
complicated task of creating environmental resilience in the wake of issues like
climate change, sea-level rise, and the loss of species and habitat. This project looks to
Biocultural Restoration and the Traditional Ecological Knowledge of the Confederated
Tribes of the Coos, Lower Umpqua and Siuslaw Indians, and their experiences within
environmental restoration and management practices today. Using a literature review
and semi-structured interviews, four categories for changes, and a set of practice
principles were developed that could inform future restoration efforts on the Central
Oregon Coast or elsewhere. This research was conducted with the understanding that
indigenous peoples are experts of their own culture and realities. Drawing insight and
inspiration from the experiences and cultural practices of the Hanis and Miluk Coos,
Quiich [Lower Umpqua], and Sha'yuushtl'a [Siuslaw] peoples and their centuries of
place-based knowledge, this research is intended to provide a lens through which
to view the environmental world, illuminating a unique perspective on humanenvironmental
relationships and reciprocity. Through this research, I intend to show
the importance Biocultural Restoration and Traditional Ecological Knowledge can have
in modern restoration and the critical role indigenous peoples play in the management
of their ancestral lands. Furthermore, this research may offer insight into the potential
for collaborative work between Tribes and other environmental management entities.
en_US
Creative Commons BY-NC-ND 4.0-US
Indigenous knowledge
TEK
Traditional Ecological Knowledge
Oregon Coast
Salmon
First Foods
Coos, Siuslaw, Lower Umpqua, Indians
Tribes
Restoration
Biocultural Restoration
The Confederated Tribes of the Coos, Lower Umpqua & Siuslaw Indians
CTCLUSI
Beyond Salmon: Biocultural Restoration on the Central Oregon Coast
Terminal Project
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
URL
http://scholarsbank.uoregon.edu/xmlui/bitstream/1794/26349/1/Craig_Amanda_2021.pdf
File
MD5
dae018b60db58f8de0dced5d183eac48
8703260
application/pdf
Craig_Amanda_2021.pdf
URL
http://scholarsbank.uoregon.edu/xmlui/bitstream/1794/26349/3/Craig_Amanda_2021.pdf.txt
File
MD5
01e3a019b13239c462aa8517b18fc46d
123956
text/plain
Craig_Amanda_2021.pdf.txt
oai:scholarsbank.uoregon.edu:1794/263342021-06-14T07:22:26Zcom_1794_7553com_1794_7552com_1794_7550col_1794_10476
Scholars' Bank at the Knight Library
author
Grover, Alison
2021-06-13T20:49:19Z
2021-06-13T20:49:19Z
2021-06-13
https://scholarsbank.uoregon.edu/xmlui/handle/1794/26334
Between 60% and 80% of global energy is
consumed in urban areas, and this will increase
with urbanization and population growth. We
must meet this new demand sustainably. By
2050, the Green New Deal calls for global
net-zero emissions, and by 2040, Oregon will
require fifty percent of its energy use to be
fueled by renewable energy sources. Scholars
have noted that the US contains enough
developed land to retrofit to meet our renewable
energy goals without using greenfields. Siting
renewable energy infrastructure within the built
environment of cities can help reduce energy
sprawl and transmission losses while creating
an opportunity for social engagement and
education. Making urban space multifunctional
is important because of limited land availability
and competing land uses. With that in mind, this
project poses the question:
How could renewable energy
synergize with social space, green
infrastructure, and sustainable
transportation in urban public space
to create hyperfunctional energy
landscapes?
This project addresses multiple underresearched
aspects of renewable energy
including small-scale energy production,
energy production in the right-of-way (ROW),
and the social functions of energy production.
This project reviews literature on decentralized
energy systems, landscape multifunctionality,
environmental justice, sustainable
transportation, and environmental functions of
the ROW. As a reference, I used an inventory
process to analyze the hyperfunctionality of
winning submissions to Land Art Generator,
an annual design competition with the motto
“Renewable Energy Can Be Beautiful”. The
overall findings of the literature review,
inventory analysis, and projective design
phases include the development of 12 Building
Blocks, 9 Typologies of Urban Public Space,
and 1 Site Design in the Lents Neighborhood
of Portland, Oregon. Using a 7-block segment
as example, the Site Design envisions the
Lents Green Ring, a circuit of streets and
greenways in an underserved neighborhood as
a hyperfunctional energy landscape.
en_US
Creative Commons BY-NC-ND 4.0-US
urban design
renewable energy
solar
greenway
sustainable transportation
hyperfunctional
multifunctional
Hyperfunctional Energy Landscapes: Retrofitting Public Space With Renewable Energy Infrastructure
Terminal Project
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
URL
http://scholarsbank.uoregon.edu/xmlui/bitstream/1794/26334/1/Grover_Alison_2021.pdf
File
MD5
7f29fcfe08665f5abbeeeb54da427592
22796648
application/pdf
Grover_Alison_2021.pdf
URL
http://scholarsbank.uoregon.edu/xmlui/bitstream/1794/26334/3/Grover_Alison_2021.pdf.txt
File
MD5
9b6812057d1d5ec43ef5e91b5c3c3b95
120789
text/plain
Grover_Alison_2021.pdf.txt
oai:scholarsbank.uoregon.edu:1794/263442021-06-14T07:22:55Zcom_1794_7553com_1794_7552com_1794_7550col_1794_10476
Scholars' Bank at the Knight Library
author
Greenwald, Hillary
2021-06-13T22:30:39Z
2021-06-13T22:30:39Z
2021-06-13
https://scholarsbank.uoregon.edu/xmlui/handle/1794/26344
Disc golf is a rapidly growing sport all over the world; it is played like
traditional golf, throwing a small frisbee, or disc, instead of hitting a ball,
and playing a course which weaves through forested and other natural areas
instead of across a manicured lawn. The attraction to the sport is attributed
to its accessibility, the low-impact exercise opportunity it offers, time spent
in nature, and its family friendly factor. During the last 10-15 years disc
golf has experienced exponential growth, and course installation has grown
alongside this increase in popularity. However, lack of official guidelines and
regulation have led to poor course design decisions in terms of ecological
preservation, leading to habitat degradation and other environmental
damage. This project explores disc golf course design through the lens
of environmental preservation. A merging of the fields of science and
design will be at the forefront of the methodology developed, with the
aim of demonstrating the importance and practicality of using scientific
data to inform design in ecologically sensitive areas, where disc golf
courses are often located. This project documents incidences of observed
environmental degradation occurring on disc golf courses and then uses a
landscape analysis methodology to develop a set of course design principles
which aim to mitigate said degradation. Those principles are then merged
with existing design principles to produce a new course plan in Oakridge,
Oregon.
en_US
Creative Commons BY-NC-ND 4.0-US
Disc Golf
Landscape analysis
GIS analysis
Professional Disc Golf Association
Land degradation
Recreational land use
Land suitability
Disc golf course design
Raster analysis
Park design
Sustained Flight: Ecological Disc Golf Course Design, A Guide
Terminal Project
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
URL
http://scholarsbank.uoregon.edu/xmlui/bitstream/1794/26344/1/Greenwald_Hillary_2021.pdf
File
MD5
9aa03ee700a53463c6c148ec4d106209
56704263
application/pdf
Greenwald_Hillary_2021.pdf
URL
http://scholarsbank.uoregon.edu/xmlui/bitstream/1794/26344/3/Greenwald_Hillary_2021.pdf.txt
File
MD5
e2d6ef1788830e9e0b4c41dd83eda41f
107068
text/plain
Greenwald_Hillary_2021.pdf.txt
oai:scholarsbank.uoregon.edu:1794/236702018-08-28T17:12:45Zcom_1794_7553com_1794_7552com_1794_7550col_1794_10476
Scholars' Bank at the Knight Library
author
Maxson, John
2018-08-25T23:37:39Z
2018-08-25T23:37:39Z
2018-08-25
http://hdl.handle.net/1794/23670
The troubling material history of the colonial mahogany trade’s ties to slave labor and
environmental degradation is often obscured by the reverence we place on the craftsmanship
and pedigree of its products. Although historians have explored this complex past, the story
has not been told through landscape, which can engage people differently than text, film,
or images. This project uses designed landscape narratives to tell the story of the colonial
mahogany trade and to reveal the social and environmental entanglements that developed
with this system of commerce.
This research through designing project is structured by the two branches of a narrative:
story and telling. The story of the colonial mahogany trade is uncovered through literature
reviews and visualization methods like drawing and modeling, and distilled into the elemental
pieces of a story: characters, events, and settings. Similarly, the project explores the elements
of a landscape narrative: spaces, components, and sequences, and uses them to analyze
designed landscape narratives to find ways to tell a story.
‘Story’ and ‘Telling’ are synthesized together into final design proposals at Easton’s
Point in Newport, Rhode Island and at Seville Heritage Park in St. Ann, Jamaica. The final
proposals offer a new way to design multiple landscape narratives to tell a story of the
colonial mahogany trade, and further explore landscape architecture’s potential to engage
with complex material and social histories.
Creative Commons BY-NC-ND 4.0-US
Landscape narrative
Research through designing
Colonial mahogany trade
Landscape architecture
The Things We’ve Done for a Table Leg: A Landscape Narrative Approach to the Colonial Mahogany Trade
Terminal Project
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
URL
http://scholarsbank.uoregon.edu/xmlui/bitstream/1794/23670/1/Maxson_John_2018.pdf
File
MD5
af09204edf7995d242aeff42fd9373ca
129787975
application/pdf
Maxson_John_2018.pdf
URL
http://scholarsbank.uoregon.edu/xmlui/bitstream/1794/23670/3/Maxson_John_2018.pdf.txt
File
MD5
78751bad3aae03e9abd20edcc8239966
200923
text/plain
Maxson_John_2018.pdf.txt
oai:scholarsbank.uoregon.edu:1794/202542018-08-28T17:21:55Zcom_1794_7553com_1794_7552com_1794_7550col_1794_10476
Scholars' Bank at the Knight Library
author
Stoecklein, Kelly
2016-10-08T20:23:24Z
2016-10-08T20:23:24Z
2016
http://hdl.handle.net/1794/20254
Methods of selecting cultural landscapes by current leading organizations
are successful, however, this paper argues that an expanded definition of
‘cultural landscape’, a less restrictive landscape age requirement, and local
criteria should be included in the process. These additions strengthen cultural
landscape selection outcomes and ensures that landscape selections reflect
the unique local identity of a place.
This study analyzes the stages integral to selecting cultural landscapes for
preservation purposes within the United States by three highly regarded
organizations and an associated program. These stages include identification,
evaluation, and prioritization of cultural landscapes while the organizations
and programs featured are: the National Park Service’s National Register
of Historic Places program, The Cultural Landscape Foundation’s What’s
Out There Weekend program, and the Society of Architectural Historians’
Archipedia program. This project compares and critiques each program and
synthesizes findings to create a location-based method of cultural landscape
assessment.
To apply the proposed process, and to highlight the relationship between
project outcomes and target audiences, a publicly accessible educational
guidebook of Portland, Oregon is created.
en_US
Creative Commons BY-NC-ND 4.0-US
Prioritizing Place: An Argument for a Revised Cultural Landscape Selection Process. A Portland, Oregon Case Study.
Terminal Project
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
URL
http://scholarsbank.uoregon.edu/xmlui/bitstream/1794/20254/1/Stoecklein_Kelly_2016.pdf
File
MD5
38865efa45b11cce731f83d43ae4cc3c
7208057
application/pdf
Stoecklein_Kelly_2016.pdf
URL
http://scholarsbank.uoregon.edu/xmlui/bitstream/1794/20254/3/Stoecklein_Kelly_2016.pdf.txt
File
MD5
ef7fda691661dde3501ba1b0b8f2b400
243012
text/plain
Stoecklein_Kelly_2016.pdf.txt
oai:scholarsbank.uoregon.edu:1794/236742018-08-28T17:19:45Zcom_1794_7553com_1794_7552com_1794_7550col_1794_10476
Scholars' Bank at the Knight Library
author
Spencer, Rachel
2018-08-25T23:55:42Z
2018-08-25T23:55:42Z
2018-08-25
http://hdl.handle.net/1794/23674
In seeking to develop a design approach inspired by African American culture,
jazz emerged as a deep source of creativity in art and design. This project looks
at the invariable features of jazz—improvisation, syncopation, call-and-response,
harmonic structure, and kinetic orality— in relation to the sister disciplines of the
visual artwork of Gee’s Bend and the spatial practices of African Americans in the
Southern United States. Drawing connections between the media resulted in an
interpretation of their commonalities leading to a set of operating and underlying
principles that explained the occurring phenomena. These principles were then
tested in a research by design experiment with a determined context, at a site
choosen for its historical relevance to the African American community in the
Lower Albina neighborhood in Portland, Oregon. The objective of the design sought
to reestablish the urban fabric that was severed by the elevated transportation
infrastructure of the interstate highways. The resulting new approach was
discovered through an iterative process of design and reflection that tested the
interpretation of constructed principles inspired by African American cultural
expression. This new approach consists of a set of guidelines that is transferrable
to other sites and is an opportunity for future research.
en_US
Creative Commons BY-NC-ND 4.0-US
A Different Expression of Order: A Design Process Inspired by African American Art & Culture
Terminal Project
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
URL
http://scholarsbank.uoregon.edu/xmlui/bitstream/1794/23674/1/Spencer_Rachel_2018.pdf
File
MD5
49374abd8f42668ae700b94de1d073e1
31147464
application/pdf
Spencer_Rachel_2018.pdf
URL
http://scholarsbank.uoregon.edu/xmlui/bitstream/1794/23674/3/Spencer_Rachel_2018.pdf.txt
File
MD5
637a31aae9bf5ac139e6a1980451fbd6
243586
text/plain
Spencer_Rachel_2018.pdf.txt
oai:scholarsbank.uoregon.edu:1794/261212021-03-25T07:23:17Zcom_1794_7553com_1794_7552com_1794_7550col_1794_10476
Scholars' Bank at the Knight Library
author
Barker, Kelli
2021-03-24T18:43:27Z
2021-03-24T18:43:27Z
2021-03-24
https://scholarsbank.uoregon.edu/xmlui/handle/1794/26121
The goal of this research is to assess the potential for fuel breaks, as a fire management tool, to positively influence the resiliency of ecological and social systems within the region of the Pacific Northwest. Landscapes of the Pacific Northwest have historically been managed by fire regimes, both naturally occurring and human initiated. The buildup of woody debris, as a result of human maintenance regimes, in combination with climate change have led to an increasing risk of wildfires, affecting ecosystems and the safety of people. Fuel breaks may have potential to act as a fire management tool to increase the resilience of both social and ecological systems affected by the absence and presence of wildfire. This research focusses on Portland, OR, utilizing Forest Park, its adjacent neighborhood Northwest Heights, and the respective area of private forest land in between as a case study. Fuel break design elements are distinguished through a literature review and then categorized under sub categories of ecological and social resilience to be applied to the case study. The results of this research are a table of fuel break design elements, translated from resilience theory, and an evaluation of the case study for the application of a fuel break design and the inclusion of the designated design elements.
en_US
Creative Commons BY-NC-ND 4.0-US
Fuel Break
Wildland Urban Interface
Fire Management
Fire Management Design
Resilience
Resilient Fuel Break Design: Translating Ecological and Social Resilience Theory into Fuel Break Design Within the Pacific Northwest
Terminal Project
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
URL
http://scholarsbank.uoregon.edu/xmlui/bitstream/1794/26121/1/Barker_Kelli_2020.pdf
File
MD5
66a7f3895487f35cbaabff3c97ed7917
67281983
application/pdf
Barker_Kelli_2020.pdf
URL
http://scholarsbank.uoregon.edu/xmlui/bitstream/1794/26121/3/Barker_Kelli_2020.pdf.txt
File
MD5
a2d56e3b09511e0ff6cbe9124893318a
128046
text/plain
Barker_Kelli_2020.pdf.txt
oai:scholarsbank.uoregon.edu:1794/201262019-03-04T19:09:20Zcom_1794_7553com_1794_7552com_1794_7550col_1794_10476
Scholars' Bank at the Knight Library
author
Lewis, Alison
2016-09-15T20:10:48Z
2016-09-15T20:10:48Z
2016
http://hdl.handle.net/1794/20126
This project uses spatial analysis to identify existing buildings in Multnomah County, Oregon, that, if
retrofitted with an ecoroof, could serve as breeding and stopover habitat for the Oregon vesper sparrow
and common nighthawk. Both bird species have experienced population declines in recent years as
a result of urban development, pesticide use, and predation. This project explores a new approach to
habitat restoration, where suitable sites for bird habitat are identified on buildings themselves, rather
than the land surrounding buildings. Through this exploration, the project deviates from more standard
approaches to ecoroof design, which conceives these vegetated spaces with little consideration for
the wildlife habitat they could provide, or the larger green matrix within which they exist. The over
arching premise is if ecoroofs are adjacent to suitable habitat, the Oregon vesper sparrow and common
nighthawk are more likely to use them for breeding and stopover habitat. The results identified a total of
49 buildings suitable for ecoroofs to support Oregon vesper sparrow breeding habit and 188 buildings
suitable for ecoroofs to support common nighthawk breeding and Oregon vesper sparrow stopover
habitat. With suitable buildings identified, this project presents an ecoroof design on one building in
Portland that details the layout of grasses and forbs, all of which support the Oregon vesper sparrow’s
breeding life history needs.
en_US
Creative Commons BY-NC-ND 4.0-US
Ecoroofs
Green roofs
Bird habitat
Biodiversity
Green matrix
Corridors
Spatial analysis
Geographic Information Systems (GIS)
ArcGIS
Sustainability
Conservation
Habitat
Ecoroofs in Multnomah County: Oregon as habitat for the Oregon vesper sparrow and common nighthawk
Terminal Project
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
URL
http://scholarsbank.uoregon.edu/xmlui/bitstream/1794/20126/1/Lewis_Alison_2016.pdf
File
MD5
618c8b14cd89be3d8dc617963490dce0
26711483
application/pdf
Lewis_Alison_2016.pdf
URL
http://scholarsbank.uoregon.edu/xmlui/bitstream/1794/20126/3/Lewis_Alison_2016.pdf.txt
File
MD5
6ccd0609c51e1ac45d8f7189b3845059
148992
text/plain
Lewis_Alison_2016.pdf.txt
oai:scholarsbank.uoregon.edu:1794/263382021-06-14T07:22:42Zcom_1794_7553com_1794_7552com_1794_7550col_1794_10476
Scholars' Bank at the Knight Library
author
Gardiner, Sierra
2021-06-13T21:26:01Z
2021-06-13T21:26:01Z
2021-06-13
https://scholarsbank.uoregon.edu/xmlui/handle/1794/26338
Portland, Oregon does not have an urban climate change mitigation program to protect ecology, capture carbon, build
resilience, and develop social equity in a single strategy. Local programs are siloed into one or two aspects of climate
change mitigation and rarely overlap with broader initiatives. Meanwhile Portland has an array of liminal public lands
that have no future use. This Masters Project aims to transpose the principles of regenerative design onto undevelopable
liminal landscapes in urban Portland to test if these sites can contribute to climate change mitigation and if climate
change mitigation is the highest and best use of interstitial public land.
Using a Research-by-Design methodology, eight experimental designs were developed to meet four regenerative designbased
mitigation goals: 1) Enhance Social Equity, 2) Reduce Atmospheric Carbon/ Urban Heat Island, 3) Increase Ecosystem
Services, and 4) Encourage Resilience. Then, using three site typologies across all eight experimental sites—Right of Ways,
Underpasses, and Ghost Ramps—the design experiments were tested against case studies of similar design scope as well
as existing city programs to determine each sites’ aptitude for climate change mitigation using a regenerative design
hub framework and calculator. Following the design experiment phase, each site received a regenerative hub score and
was accompanied by an experimental design. The project concludes with projected climate change mitigation findings
based on discoveries from the eight experimental designs and an analysis of how existing city programs can be unified to
mitigate climate change on undevelopable public land.
en_US
Creative Commons BY-NC-ND 4.0-US
Regenerative Hubs; Liminal Landscapes
Terminal Project
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
URL
http://scholarsbank.uoregon.edu/xmlui/bitstream/1794/26338/1/Gardiner_Sierra_2021.pdf
File
MD5
af79aa87f30e2045bcb4440beeff11b5
43821041
application/pdf
Gardiner_Sierra_2021.pdf
URL
http://scholarsbank.uoregon.edu/xmlui/bitstream/1794/26338/3/Gardiner_Sierra_2021.pdf.txt
File
MD5
09f398c50e94c284790306fb3cf2db1d
129785
text/plain
Gardiner_Sierra_2021.pdf.txt
oai:scholarsbank.uoregon.edu:1794/263502021-06-14T07:22:36Zcom_1794_7553com_1794_7552com_1794_7550col_1794_10476
Scholars' Bank at the Knight Library
author
Corl, Carolyn
2021-06-13T23:11:45Z
2021-06-13T23:11:45Z
2021-06-13
https://scholarsbank.uoregon.edu/xmlui/handle/1794/26350
In recent decades, dam removals on American rivers
have accelerated due to environmental concerns for
stream ecology coinciding with the obsolescence of dam
infrastructure built in the early 20th century. In some cases,
parts of a dam’s structure are left behind to minimize
riverbank disturbance or to appease community members
who oppose dam removal for its cultural significance.
Like other post-industrial landscapes, the traces and ruins
associated with dam infrastructure tell a story of the
site before, during and after the infrastructure severely
altered the landscape. At dam removal sites specifically,
acknowledging this narrative of landscape change and
recovery is a unique design opportunity that cannot be
addressed through restoration or preservation alone. But
through literature review and case study analyses, this
project builds a design framework for engaging with the
traces left behind by dam removal. By examining how
landscape architects have previously worked with other
types of post-industrial landscape remnants to elicit a site’s
narrative through design, a decision-making procedure
for proposing design interventions for historic remnants
and how to make them compatible with an overall
design concept was developed. The design intervention
framework is then exemplified through a proposed site
design at the former Savage Rapids Dam on the Rogue
River in Southern Oregon.
en_US
Creative Commons BY-NC-ND 4.0-US
historic landscapes
cultural landscapes
cultural landscapes
Rogue River, Oregon
post-industrial landscapes
Destination Dam Removal: designing historical narratives into post-industrial landscapes
Terminal Project
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
URL
http://scholarsbank.uoregon.edu/xmlui/bitstream/1794/26350/1/Corl_Carolyn_2021.pdf
File
MD5
5091573c881baa4873408c75fbcf7897
9545377
application/pdf
Corl_Carolyn_2021.pdf
URL
http://scholarsbank.uoregon.edu/xmlui/bitstream/1794/26350/3/Corl_Carolyn_2021.pdf.txt
File
MD5
1fc6d46d3b5531614d788b61f602da62
252957
text/plain
Corl_Carolyn_2021.pdf.txt
oai:scholarsbank.uoregon.edu:1794/285132023-07-31T23:02:26Zcom_1794_7553com_1794_7552com_1794_7550col_1794_10476
Scholars' Bank at the Knight Library
advisor
Geffel, Michael
author
Olson, Peter
2023-07-10T21:07:37Z
2023-07-10T21:07:37Z
2023-06
https://scholarsbank.uoregon.edu/xmlui/handle/1794/28513
0009-0002-5432-2243
As the most densely populated community on the Oregon Coast, Coos Bay has more infrastructure threatened than any other. Sea level rise projections change quickly, and lately have only been increasing. Currently, the Oregon Coast is projected to experience about 6” in sea level rise by the end of this decade, 30” by 2050, and maybe as much as 6’ by the end of the century. Due to an aging stormwater system, the problem isn’t as simple as water inching into the mainland. This project will explore options for coastal management and propose methods for Coos Bay to respond to the threat of flooding before 2050.
en
Creative Commons BY-NC-ND 4.0-US
Coos Bay
sea level rise
flooding
green infastructure
Soaking Up Sea Level Rise: Greenstreet Solutions for Coos Bay
Thesis / Dissertation
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
URL
https://scholarsbank.uoregon.edu/xmlui/bitstream/1794/28513/1/olson_2023.pdf
File
MD5
2d9f634b78279ebc10968e80c8d813d4
37572321
application/pdf
olson_2023.pdf
URL
https://scholarsbank.uoregon.edu/xmlui/bitstream/1794/28513/3/olson_2023.pdf.txt
File
MD5
b28bff1c81b5f0ac80b2a0599c941c43
35624
text/plain
olson_2023.pdf.txt
oai:scholarsbank.uoregon.edu:1794/246442019-06-19T18:18:24Zcom_1794_7553com_1794_7552com_1794_7550col_1794_10476
Scholars' Bank at the Knight Library
author
Stillman, C
2019-06-19T00:48:55Z
2019-06-19T00:48:55Z
2019-06-18
https://scholarsbank.uoregon.edu/xmlui/handle/1794/24644
Using a study site in rural coastal Oregon (within the City of Coos Bay) this project generated a transferable process for rural coastal towns in need of efficient and pragmatic flood-mitigation plans. By observing the spatial relationships of inundation processes to their local context and analyzing how they change through time, this research identified critical failure points, a potential timeline for failures, pragmatic opportunities for flood mitigation, and locally relevant intervention options at the study site. The transferable framework requires researchers to identify and map inundation drivers such as sea-level rise, rainfall, and storm surge across the site for selected scenarios (current, 2030, 2050, and 2100). Next, associated flood control infrastructure, including levees and tidegates, are mapped. Relevant context, including buildings, land uses, roads, railways and any known temporal change is then added. Analyzing the resulting maps draws on local inundation, protections, and context to derive intervention opportunities for the study site.
The impacts of sea level rise have drawn global attention and yet there is no agreed upon approach for how to plan for it. Cities have already begun confronting flooding from natural disasters, from elevated average high tides, and from land subsistence. Global models of climate change provide generalized information that must then be applied and corrected
at the regional scale. Regional models then need to be mapped within their local spatial context to inform urban planning processes. The framework developed in this research offers a method for how to incorporate sea level rise, stormwater, and regional protections at a local planning scale.
en_US
Creative Commons BY-NC-ND 4.0-US
Stormwater
Climate change
Sea level rise
Planning
Resilience
Coastal resilience
Coastal planning
Hazard map
Coastal flood
Flood mitigation
Sea Level, Stormwater, and Land Use: Inundation in City Planning for Coos Bay, Oregon
Terminal Project
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
URL
http://scholarsbank.uoregon.edu/xmlui/bitstream/1794/24644/1/Stillman_C_2019.pdf
File
MD5
e7fdf1f6ef9daafd4655989312f67182
56383456
application/pdf
Stillman_C_2019.pdf
URL
http://scholarsbank.uoregon.edu/xmlui/bitstream/1794/24644/3/Stillman_C_2019.pdf.txt
File
MD5
3f71d8ece731625aae39b9c5be2c59a1
123478
text/plain
Stillman_C_2019.pdf.txt
oai:scholarsbank.uoregon.edu:1794/261292021-03-25T07:22:08Zcom_1794_7553com_1794_7552com_1794_7550col_1794_10476
Scholars' Bank at the Knight Library
author
Lien, William Weiti
2021-03-24T19:20:44Z
2021-03-24T19:20:44Z
2021-03-24
https://scholarsbank.uoregon.edu/xmlui/handle/1794/26129
Taiwan’s national plan to expand solar energy by 2025, including rooftop photovoltaics
and ground-level photovoltaics, triggered numerous public debate and land-use conflicts since Taiwan’s 2016 presidential election. In particular, the wetlands along the southwest coast have been attracting many solar farms because of their excellent solar radiation potentials as former saltpans; however, this abundant wetland ecosystem also supports many endangered migratory bird species, which has been leading to the conflicts of “Greens” between solar energy and critical habitats. This project developed alternative future scenarios to assess the solar generation potential and other land uses of the southwest coastal landscape for the 40 years’ timeframe from now to 2060. Based on the scenario guide input from the experts, solar zoning overlay and developmental rights, plans for two different future scenarios that give priority on climate adaptation and photovoltaic expansion, respectively. These scenarios project areas for solar energy development considering their priority in relation to flooding conditions, ecological
conservation, and land-use developmental strategies. Future scenarios are evaluated according to its land area and associated performance of flood mitigation, ecological conservation, energy generation, and land-use efficiency. Findings show that the total solar developmental rights of the expansion scenarios grow slightly (13.57GWc in 2040 and 15.03GWc in 2060), while the CO2e emission avoided dropped from 4424 kilo-ton to 3796 kilo-ton CO2e. Adaptation plans have a constant growth of solar developmental rights (7.97 GWc in 2040 and 15.42 GWc in 2060), while CO2e emission avoided grows 2486 kilo-ton to 4464 kilo-ton. Although the expansion plan saves more carbon emission in 2040, the adaptation plans are more efficient in land-use, impacting less agricultural land and wetland than expansion scenarios in both 2040 and 2060 while saving compatible carbon emission. This indicates that adaptation planning is more a systematic
approach that brings multiple benefits over photovoltaic expansion planning in the southwest coastal Taiwan context.
en_US
Creative Commons BY-NC-ND 4.0-US
Conflicts of Greens
Alternative Future Method
Scenario Planning
Landscape Planning
Taiwan
Black-faced Spoonbill (Platalea minor)
A Landscape Approach to the Conflicts of Greens: Planning for Energy and Wetland Land-Use Growth in Southwestern Taiwan's Coastal Landscape in a Climate-Changing Era
Terminal Project
Tk9OLUVYQ0xVU0lWRSBESVNUUklCVVRJT04gTElDRU5TRQoKQnkgc2lnbmluZyBhbmQgc3VibWl0dGluZyB0aGlzIGxpY2Vuc2UsIHlvdSAodGhlIGF1dGhvcihzKSBvciBjb3B5cmlnaHQKb3duZXIpIGdyYW50IHRvIHRoZSBVbml2ZXJzaXR5IG9mIE9yZWdvbiAoVU8pIHRoZSBub24tZXhjbHVzaXZlIHJpZ2h0IHRvCnJlcHJvZHVjZSwgY29udmVydCAoYXMgZGVmaW5lZCBiZWxvdyksIGFuZC9vciBkaXN0cmlidXRlIHlvdXIgc3VibWlzc2lvbgooaW5jbHVkaW5nIHRoZSBhYnN0cmFjdCkgd29ybGR3aWRlIGluIHByaW50IGFuZCBlbGVjdHJvbmljIGZvcm1hdCBhbmQKaW4gYW55IG1lZGl1bSwgaW5jbHVkaW5nIGJ1dCBub3QgbGltaXRlZCB0byBhdWRpbyBvciB2aWRlby4KCllvdSBhZ3JlZSB0aGF0IFVPIG1heSwgd2l0aG91dCBjaGFuZ2luZyB0aGUgY29udGVudCwgY29udmVydCB0aGUKc3VibWlzc2lvbiB0byBhbnkgbWVkaXVtIG9yIGZvcm1hdCBmb3IgdGhlIHB1cnBvc2Ugb2YgcHJlc2VydmF0aW9uLgoKWW91IGFsc28gYWdyZWUgdGhhdCB0aGUgVU8gTGlicmFyaWVzIG1heSBrZWVwIG1vcmUgdGhhbiBvbmUgY29weSBvZgp0aGlzIHN1Ym1pc3Npb24gZm9yIHB1cnBvc2VzIG9mIHNlY3VyaXR5LCBiYWNrLXVwIGFuZCBwcmVzZXJ2YXRpb24uClRoZSBMaWJyYXJpZXMgd2lsbCBtYWtlIGEgZ29vZCBmYWl0aCBlZmZvcnQgdG8gcHJlc2VydmUgYW5kIGRpc3RyaWJ1dGUKdGhpcyBzdWJtaXNzaW9uLiAgSW4gdGhlIGV2ZW50IHRoYXQgdGhlIExpYnJhcmllcyBhcmUgdW5hYmxlIHRvIGNvbnRpbnVlCnRvIG1haW50YWluIHRoaXMgc3VibWlzc2lvbiBhcyBwYXJ0IG9mIHRoZSBpbnN0aXR1dGlvbmFsIHJlcG9zaXRvcnksCnRoZSBMaWJyYXJpZXMgcmVzZXJ2ZSB0aGUgcmlnaHQgdG8gcmV0dXJuIHRoZSBjb250ZW50IHRvIHRoZSBzdWJtaXR0aW5nCmRlcGFydG1lbnRzL3VuaXRzL2luZGl2aWR1YWxzLiBJZiB0aGUgZW50aXR5IGlzIG5vIGxvbmdlciBpbiBleGlzdGVuY2UsCm9yIGlmIHRoZSBpbmRpdmlkdWFsIGlzIHVudHJhY2VhYmxlLCB0aGUgTGlicmFyaWVzIHdpbGwgYXJyYW5nZSB0byBoYXZlCnRoZSBtYXRlcmlhbHMgYXBwcmFpc2VkIGFuZCBwb3NzaWJseSBhcmNoaXZlZCBhcyBwYXJ0IG9mIHRoZSB1bml2ZXJzaXR5J3MKZGlnaXRhbCBhcmNoaXZlcy4KCllvdSByZXByZXNlbnQgdGhhdCB0aGUgc3VibWlzc2lvbiBpcyB5b3VyIG9yaWdpbmFsIHdvcmssIGFuZCB0aGF0IHlvdQpoYXZlIHRoZSByaWdodCB0byBncmFudCB0aGUgcmlnaHRzIGNvbnRhaW5lZCBpbiB0aGlzIGxpY2Vuc2UuIFlvdSBhbHNvCnJlcHJlc2VudCB0aGF0IHlvdXIgc3VibWlzc2lvbiBkb2VzIG5vdCwgdG8gdGhlIGJlc3Qgb2YgeW91ciBrbm93bGVkZ2UsCmluZnJpbmdlIHVwb24gYW55b25lJ3MgY29weXJpZ2h0LgoKSWYgdGhlIHN1Ym1pc3Npb24gY29udGFpbnMgbWF0ZXJpYWwgZm9yIHdoaWNoIHlvdSBkbyBub3QgaG9sZCBjb3B5cmlnaHQsCnlvdSByZXByZXNlbnQgdGhhdCB5b3UgaGF2ZSBvYnRhaW5lZCBhbnkgbmVjZXNzYXJ5IHBlcm1pc3Npb24gZnJvbSB0aGUKY29weXJpZ2h0IG93bmVyIHRvIGdyYW50IFVPIHRoZSByaWdodHMgcmVxdWlyZWQgYnkgdGhpcyBsaWNlbnNlLCBhbmQgCnRoYXQgc3VjaCB0aGlyZC1wYXJ0eSBvd25lZCBtYXRlcmlhbCBpcyBjbGVhcmx5IGlkZW50aWZpZWQgYW5kCmFja25vd2xlZGdlZCB3aXRoaW4gdGhlIHRleHQgb3IgY29udGVudCBvZiB0aGUgc3VibWlzc2lvbi4KCklGIFRIRSBTVUJNSVNTSU9OIElTIEJBU0VEIFVQT04gV09SSyBUSEFUIEhBUyBCRUVOIFNQT05TT1JFRCBPUiBTVVBQT1JURUQKQlkgQU4gQUdFTkNZIE9SIE9SR0FOSVpBVElPTiBPVEhFUiBUSEFOIFVPLCBZT1UgUkVQUkVTRU5UIFRIQVQgWU9VIEhBVkUKRlVMRklMTEVEIEFOWSBSSUdIVCBPRiBSRVZJRVcgT1IgT1RIRVIgT0JMSUdBVElPTlMgUkVRVUlSRUQgQlkgU1VDSApDT05UUkFDVCBPUiBBR1JFRU1FTlQuCgpVTyB3aWxsIGNsZWFybHkgaWRlbnRpZnkgeW91ciBuYW1lKHMpIGFzIHRoZSBhdXRob3Iocykgb3Igb3duZXIocykgb2YKdGhlIHN1Ym1pc3Npb24sIGFuZCB3aWxsIG5vdCBtYWtlIGFueSBhbHRlcmF0aW9uLCBvdGhlciB0aGFuIGFzIGFsbG93ZWQKYnkgdGhpcyBsaWNlbnNlLCB0byB5b3VyIHN1Ym1pc3Npb24uCgpQbGVhc2Ugbm90ZSB0aGF0IGVsZWN0cm9uaWMgdGhlc2VzIGFuZCBkaXNzZXJ0YXRpb25zIGNhbm5vdCBiZSB3aXRoZHJhd24KZnJvbSB0aGUgYXJjaGl2ZS4K
URL
http://scholarsbank.uoregon.edu/xmlui/bitstream/1794/26129/1/Lien_William_Weiti_2020.pdf
File
MD5
6681a0a388f96e529e8e50f6e4b830bd
11069114
application/pdf
Lien_William_Weiti_2020.pdf
URL
http://scholarsbank.uoregon.edu/xmlui/bitstream/1794/26129/3/Lien_William_Weiti_2020.pdf.txt
File
MD5
12480e68e4d390f135d9df5b58adf45f
188515
text/plain
Lien_William_Weiti_2020.pdf.txt
oai:scholarsbank.uoregon.edu:1794/285092023-07-31T22:47:59Zcom_1794_7553com_1794_7552com_1794_7550col_1794_10476
Scholars' Bank at the Knight Library
advisor
Ribe, Rob
author
Gonzalez, Sean (McClean)
2023-07-10T20:56:54Z
2023-07-10T20:56:54Z
2023-06
https://scholarsbank.uoregon.edu/xmlui/handle/1794/28509
0009-0006-8949-0297
This project seeks to further explore P.V. over canals
specifically in urban contexts.
I will begin by giving a more detailed overview of
climate, water, and energy within the Klamath Basin, focusing
specifically on the A-Canal, my project site located in Klamath
Falls, Oregon.
I will then provide a brief overview of the current state of
P.V. over canal and discuss why I chose to focus specifically on
this urban canal.
Then, I will switch to the process I took to develop
objectives and identify the constraints to designing an urban P.V.
over canal system in Klamath Falls.
Then, I will walk through three design exercises where I
explored the role that a landscape architect could play in a P.V.
over canal project on the A-Canal or other urban canals.
At the end, I will provide an overview of what I learned
from this process, including specific strategies that could be used
to adapt P.V. over canal to more urban contexts.
en
Creative Commons BY-NC-ND 4.0-US
solar
canals
irrigation
renewable energy
Reworking Evaporation: New Energy Canals for Farms and Fish in Klamath Falls Oregon
Thesis / Dissertation
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
URL
https://scholarsbank.uoregon.edu/xmlui/bitstream/1794/28509/1/gonzalez_2023.pdf
File
MD5
cecf657c774654f287950e507a422ff0
84353107
application/pdf
gonzalez_2023.pdf
URL
https://scholarsbank.uoregon.edu/xmlui/bitstream/1794/28509/3/gonzalez_2023.pdf.txt
File
MD5
47b41493eeb2c64caa865c7ef3cf0e20
87912
text/plain
gonzalez_2023.pdf.txt
oai:scholarsbank.uoregon.edu:1794/201292017-08-04T23:03:21Zcom_1794_7553com_1794_7552com_1794_7550col_1794_10476
Scholars' Bank at the Knight Library
author
Stapleton, Elizabeth
2016-09-15T20:13:41Z
2016-09-15T20:13:41Z
2016-09-15
http://hdl.handle.net/1794/20129
The graphics we make influence the ways we
create and conceive of landscape. The static graphic
conventions currently preferred within landscape
architecture often fall short of capturing the intangible
characteristics inherent in dynamic landscape systems.
Such graphics leave intangible landscape characteristics
unaccounted for in not only our representations, but also
our designed spaces and common understandings. This
trend runs counter to the foundations of contemporary
landscape understanding, most notably ecological theory
and phenomenological philosophy. This is problematic
for viewers as it perpetuates the common perception of
landscape as immutable object. Similarly, such static
images deprive researchers of potentially revelatory
graphic experiences. Structured as a classical argument,
this project begins to build the case that landscape
architecture does not prioritize the representation of
intangible and non-spatial landscape qualities. When
reflected in our built work, this may function to the
detriment of such intangible landscape qualities as
community connection, ecological functionality, and
landscape perception.
Networks represent the intangible concept of
connection, a crucial characteristic of landscape in both ecological and social capacities. Graphic depictions of
networks are widespread outside the field of landscape
architecture, and common graphic trends emerge across
disparate subjects and fields of study, as shown in the
research of designer and data visualization expert Manuel
Lima.
This project evaluates the degree to which
landscape architecture as a field has embraced these
graphic trends in its depiction of landscapes through
a comprehensive examination of the graphics used in
award winning landscape architectural projects over
the past 10 years. In doing so, the project supports the
argument that landscape architectural graphics continue
to preference the depiction of spatial, projection-based
imagery over the depiction of intangible landscape
elements and suggests tools from outside the field as
possible strategies for rectifying this misalignment.
en_US
Creative Commons BY-NC-ND 4.0-US
Ecology
Phenomenology
Design
INTANGIBLE LANDSCAPES: an argument for the realignment of landscape representation and theory through network visualization
Terminal Project
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
URL
http://scholarsbank.uoregon.edu/xmlui/bitstream/1794/20129/1/Stapleton_Elizabeth_2016.pdf
File
MD5
36aed3893089226d4e536f47cf5aeb7e
13049960
application/pdf
Stapleton_Elizabeth_2016.pdf
URL
http://scholarsbank.uoregon.edu/xmlui/bitstream/1794/20129/3/Stapleton_Elizabeth_2016.pdf.txt
File
MD5
62c0fbd0fb66667bb7477b5dabb1c7d9
218395
text/plain
Stapleton_Elizabeth_2016.pdf.txt
oai:scholarsbank.uoregon.edu:1794/246412019-06-19T07:32:55Zcom_1794_7553com_1794_7552com_1794_7550col_1794_10476
Scholars' Bank at the Knight Library
author
Heese, Brianna
2019-06-19T00:16:10Z
2019-06-19T00:16:10Z
2019-06-18
https://scholarsbank.uoregon.edu/xmlui/handle/1794/24641
Climate change impacts the world at different rates and scales. This project examines the
effects of climate change in the residential landscape in the Midwest, an under-examined— but crucial—topic in climate change studies. Columbia, Missouri is used as a case study for analyzing climate change impacts in residential planting design, specifically focusing on the success and longevity of shrub species which provide both an aesthetic and functional role in the region. This project developed a flow chart and scoring system for critical evaluation of the climate change compatibility of locally available shrubs. Shrub data from four sources in Columbia generated a condensed list of shrubs encompassing different species, cultivars, and varieties. The shrubs were assessed via a two-tiered system: first filtering shrubs by winter hardiness and invasive qualities; and second, those passing the first filters were scored based on compatibility with both current and future climate conditions in Missouri. Of the species examined, 56% were identified as compatible for current and future conditions, 3% were predicted to be compatible for future conditions, 15% were found to be at risk in future conditions, and 26% were considered incompatible as shrubs in Missouri. For those species identified as at risk under climate change, climate-compatible alternatives that fulfill similar functional and aesthetic roles were explored as replacement and design strategies. The result was an identification process that opened the door for discussion on the future of landscape aesthetics in the Midwest.
en_US
Creative Commons BY-NC-ND 4.0-US
Climate change
Shrubs
Midwest
Missouri
Drought
Soil Moisture
Yard Aesthetics
Planting Design
Compatibility
Identifying Risk
ANTICIPATING CLIMATE CHANGE IN THE MIDWEST: An Assessment of Shrub Compatibility to Climate Change in Missouri
Terminal Project
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
URL
http://scholarsbank.uoregon.edu/xmlui/bitstream/1794/24641/1/Heese_Brianna_2019.pdf
File
MD5
461be8655a14cc4d89bf2efe9fcf5a4c
56894550
application/pdf
Heese_Brianna_2019.pdf
URL
http://scholarsbank.uoregon.edu/xmlui/bitstream/1794/24641/3/Heese_Brianna_2019.pdf.txt
File
MD5
ed1eaf2f03f2e16edc963090d99b6ad7
309758
text/plain
Heese_Brianna_2019.pdf.txt
oai:scholarsbank.uoregon.edu:1794/263412021-06-14T07:22:47Zcom_1794_7553com_1794_7552com_1794_7550col_1794_10476
Scholars' Bank at the Knight Library
author
Tietz, Heather
2021-06-13T21:46:01Z
2021-06-13T21:46:01Z
2021-06-13
https://scholarsbank.uoregon.edu/xmlui/handle/1794/26341
This project explores the potential between the
ecological services of mosses and designed ceramic
substrate for creating ecologically enhanced
landscapes. Communities and environments are
negatively affected by areas with impervious
surfaces and pollution. The efficacy of new
typologies in landscape architecture, such as
living walls, could be improved with mosses’
ecological benefits and resilience. Clay is an
abundant resource that can be reshaped utilizing
3D printing and support the propagation of
mosses. This research-through-design approach
interrogates the potential growth of mosses visa-
vis experiments in 3D clay printing to create
optimal substrates. The experimental design was
installed in four locations testing four unique
substrates against moss growth.
For the three-month duration of the experiment,
monitoring through rephotography, a hygrometer,
and written observations tracked responses to
environmental conditions. Experimental results
informed a framework designing with mosses
and a rapid prototyping process using an
advanced 3D clay printer to develop a modular
screen system. For the final design phase, the
forms were simplified and contextualized at
Lawrence Hall at the University of Oregon as a
speculative case study. Experiments that received
more irrigation and less solar exposure exhibited
more moss growth. This research, experiment,
and subsequent design work serve as a proof of
concept for designing with mosses and clay using
emerging technology for creating
performative landscapes.
en_US
Creative Commons BY-NC-ND 4.0-US
Moss
Bryophyte
Clay
Ceramic
3D Print
Prototype
Research-through-Design
Bioreceptive
Biodesign
Foreground for Mosses: Designing 3D Printed Clay Bryobricks to Enhance the Built Environment
Terminal Project
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
URL
http://scholarsbank.uoregon.edu/xmlui/bitstream/1794/26341/1/Tietz_Heather_2021.pdf
File
MD5
6273e8c7659193474cb19f67c531ad36
63922002
application/pdf
Tietz_Heather_2021.pdf
URL
http://scholarsbank.uoregon.edu/xmlui/bitstream/1794/26341/3/Tietz_Heather_2021.pdf.txt
File
MD5
43bce3fb993c9cc3909a4bbc7e02123f
389197
text/plain
Tietz_Heather_2021.pdf.txt
oai:scholarsbank.uoregon.edu:1794/246492019-08-08T21:51:01Zcom_1794_7553com_1794_7552com_1794_7550col_1794_10476
Scholars' Bank at the Knight Library
author
Stone, Emma
2019-06-19T01:17:10Z
2019-06-19T01:17:10Z
2019-06-18
https://scholarsbank.uoregon.edu/xmlui/handle/1794/24649
Despite their remote location and green veneer, landfills, like
many industrial sites, have become monuments to consumerism.
Every day in Lane County, Oregon, the equivalent of six pounds
of waste per resident joins the local wasteshed. Destination: Short
Mountain Landfill. Landfills generate many kinds of experiences
and are capable of eliciting qualities of the sublime. The toxic
sublime is characterized by five tensions: beauty and ugliness,
magnitude and insignificance, known and unkown, inhabitation
and desolation, and security and risk. These tensions are identified
and illustrated by Jennifer Peeples through an analysis of Edward
Burtynsky’s photographs of toxic landscapes.
This project translates the toxic sublime from the analysis of
two-dimensional media into the design of four-dimensional
landscapes through critical practice. To do so, this project first
analyzes the origins and changing contexts of the sublime as
an aesthetic category, then synthesizes the history of waste and
landfills in America. A case study analysis reveals how the toxic
sublime is found in existing designed projects. This synthesis
and analysis informs the next phase, a site-scale design of Short
Mountain Landfill in Lane County, Oregon. The site-scale design
demonstrates how Peeples’ five tensions may be expressed in toxic
landscapes, such as landfills.
en_US
Creative Commons BY-NC-ND 4.0-US
Landfill
Sublime
Toxic sublime
Landfill design
Post-industrial landscape
Sublime Intervention
Terminal Project
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
URL
http://scholarsbank.uoregon.edu/xmlui/bitstream/1794/24649/1/Stone_Emma_2019.pdf
File
MD5
3aba9541523309c96eb3976ad82a60d4
125241088
application/pdf
Stone_Emma_2019.pdf
URL
http://scholarsbank.uoregon.edu/xmlui/bitstream/1794/24649/3/Stone_Emma_2019.pdf.txt
File
MD5
8a1b3e2dc53f5b5f9fea3939ac763502
120688
text/plain
Stone_Emma_2019.pdf.txt
oai:scholarsbank.uoregon.edu:1794/263422021-06-14T07:22:49Zcom_1794_7553com_1794_7552com_1794_7550col_1794_10476
Scholars' Bank at the Knight Library
author
Smaldone, Lexi
2021-06-13T21:55:09Z
2021-06-13T21:55:09Z
2021-06-13
https://scholarsbank.uoregon.edu/xmlui/handle/1794/26342
In the United States, women often perceive traveling to be an inconvenient and uncomfortable
experience. This experience is the result of the disproportionate role men have historically
played in transportation system design. By not considering the travel needs and preferences
of women, systems were designed that neglected the everyday transportation habits of
half the population. This issue has broad implications because our streets make up most
of our urban public space, yet their convenience to all users is often not considered when
being designed (Toomey 2012). The primary objective of this research was to determine
whether and how perceptions of streetscapes vary by gender, age, or familiarity with place.
This project also aimed to identify typologies of positive and negative street design elements
that contribute to pedestrian level of comfort. A literature review, visual preference survey,
and precedent studies were used to complete this research. The findings from these methods
guided typology generation, and the findings from the typology generation informed three
design solutions. An online visual preference survey with 408 participants found that there is
no substantial difference in perception by gender or familiarity of place, yet perception varies
slightly by age cohort. Women can be considered a keystone species. If women perceive the
streetscape just as positively as men do, then that streetscape is well-designed for all and
is accessible for vulnerable populations. In addition, regardless of gender, age, or familiarity,
most respondents positively perceived streets with well-defined, protected walkways. Future
research will be needed to further examine if other variables such as race, noise, or time of
day affect perceptions of streetscapes.
iii
en_US
Creative Commons BY-NC-ND 4.0-US
Streetscape
Street
Design
Comfort
Perception
Women
Feminist
Landscape
Typology
Eugene, Oregon
Feminist Streetscapes: A Study on Perceptions of Streetscapes in Eugene, Oregon
Technical Report
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
URL
http://scholarsbank.uoregon.edu/xmlui/bitstream/1794/26342/1/Smaldone_Lexi_2021.pdf
File
MD5
1741c8f7ed1e64fd849c6511c80cb752
59187517
application/pdf
Smaldone_Lexi_2021.pdf
URL
http://scholarsbank.uoregon.edu/xmlui/bitstream/1794/26342/3/Smaldone_Lexi_2021.pdf.txt
File
MD5
52d6ca9efcce1bde18029d4361c8f4e9
73493
text/plain
Smaldone_Lexi_2021.pdf.txt
oai:scholarsbank.uoregon.edu:1794/246462019-06-19T07:31:13Zcom_1794_7553com_1794_7552com_1794_7550col_1794_10476
Scholars' Bank at the Knight Library
author
Weaver, Christopher G
2019-06-19T01:03:56Z
2019-06-19T01:03:56Z
2019-06-18
https://scholarsbank.uoregon.edu/xmlui/handle/1794/24646
This project sought to explore ways in which algorithmic
modeling may lend a methodology to the landscape
architecture design process. Specifically, a
computational design framework originating from industrial
engineering was applied to the problem of siting
and sizing bioretention facilities—a type of stormwater
infiltration facility—on a site-scale. The primary
task was in developing the algorithm in Rhino+Grasshopper
to automate the logic sequence and calculations of
the standard multi-step stormwater design procedure.
There were several essential goals in this research
project: 1) broaden the range of stormwater solution
options for landscape architects, 2) develop the capability
to optimize design solutions for low-cost and
localized impact, 3) create an algorithmic workflow
that may be expanded upon to encode additional landscape
design variables.
As a measure of validity, the completed algorithm was
tested against a professional design for the 0.8 acre
LaTourette Park in Oregon City, OR. Both were evaluated
based on their performance in a 10-year design
storm. Compared with the professional stormwater
scheme, the algorithmic model resulted in more efficiency
in terms of lowering construction costs, percentage
of runoff reduction, and in intercepting surface
flow near its source. These are ostensibly favorable
results, although the utility of the algorithmic model
is debatable. Being a simulation narrowly geared
toward a single type of solution, the model does not
offer solution alternatives that may involve a broader
stormwater management scheme. However, it may serve
as a tool in informing decisions of that kind.
en_US
Creative Commons BY-NC-ND 4.0-US
algorithmic modeling
computational design
stormwater infrastructure
Rhino+Grasshopper
design storm
solution optimization
site-scale design
DYNAMIC DITCHES: An Algorithmic Modeling Approach to Site-Scale Stormwater Solutions
Terminal Project
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
URL
http://scholarsbank.uoregon.edu/xmlui/bitstream/1794/24646/1/Weaver_Christopher_2019.pdf
File
MD5
cb746534950ad94870fabbea3ab502ba
24417783
application/pdf
Weaver_Christopher_2019.pdf
URL
http://scholarsbank.uoregon.edu/xmlui/bitstream/1794/24646/3/Weaver_Christopher_2019.pdf.txt
File
MD5
6ad4d29b4b9592e9805ff4687e6df29e
177963
text/plain
Weaver_Christopher_2019.pdf.txt
oai:scholarsbank.uoregon.edu:1794/201282016-09-19T10:20:18Zcom_1794_7553com_1794_7552com_1794_7550col_1794_10476
Scholars' Bank at the Knight Library
author
Jepson-Sullivan, Andrew
2016-09-15T20:12:15Z
2016-09-15T20:12:15Z
2016
http://hdl.handle.net/1794/20128
Landscape architects are often required to produce graphics that
serve both as a presentation of data and as an exploration of design and
process. These images are used to not only show what a landscape will
look like when constructed, but also to understand how the composite
parts of the landscape, both tangible and intangible, interact with each
other. There is a lack of understanding about how to best compose these
images so that they perform both aspects equally well. This project
examines one aspect of this challenge: the presentation of analytic
information in landscape architectural images, specifically, in landscape
architectural maps.
This project proposes a framework for analyzing, categorizing,
and contextualizing the basic visual methods that landscape architects use
to communicate analytic information in maps. Edward Tufte’s Principles
of Analytic Design are used as a basis for this analytic framework, in
order to 1) better understand the visual characteristics and techniques
that maps use to present analytical information, 2) break down analytic
representation techniques into their component parts so that they can
potentially be applied to other landscape architectural image typologies,
and 3) create a visual language to better discuss the component parts that
make up landscape architectural images.
This analysis is structured around two map sets consisting of
maps made by landscape architects Ian McHarg and James Corner. The
results of this analysis are a set of identified analytic representational
techniques used to communicate analytic content in landscape
architectural maps, discussed and explored through both narrative and
visual description.
en_US
Creative Commons BY-NC-ND 4.0-US
Understanding Analytic Content in Landscape Architectural Maps
Terminal Project
Tk9URTogUExBQ0UgWU9VUiBPV04gTElDRU5TRSBIRVJFClRoaXMgc2FtcGxlIGxpY2Vuc2UgaXMgcHJvdmlkZWQgZm9yIGluZm9ybWF0aW9uYWwgcHVycG9zZXMgb25seS4KCk5PTi1FWENMVVNJVkUgRElTVFJJQlVUSU9OIExJQ0VOU0UKCkJ5IHNpZ25pbmcgYW5kIHN1Ym1pdHRpbmcgdGhpcyBsaWNlbnNlLCB5b3UgKHRoZSBhdXRob3Iocykgb3IgY29weXJpZ2h0Cm93bmVyKSBncmFudHMgdG8gdGhlIFVuaXZlcnNpdHkgb2YgT3JlZ29uIChVTykgdGhlIG5vbi1leGNsdXNpdmUgcmlnaHQgdG8KcmVwcm9kdWNlLCBjb252ZXJ0IChhcyBkZWZpbmVkIGJlbG93KSwgYW5kL29yIGRpc3RyaWJ1dGUgeW91ciBzdWJtaXNzaW9uCihpbmNsdWRpbmcgdGhlIGFic3RyYWN0KSB3b3JsZHdpZGUgaW4gcHJpbnQgYW5kIGVsZWN0cm9uaWMgZm9ybWF0IGFuZAppbiBhbnkgbWVkaXVtLCBpbmNsdWRpbmcgYnV0IG5vdCBsaW1pdGVkIHRvIGF1ZGlvIG9yIHZpZGVvLgoKWW91IGFncmVlIHRoYXQgVU8gbWF5LCB3aXRob3V0IGNoYW5naW5nIHRoZSBjb250ZW50LCBjb252ZXJ0IHRoZQpzdWJtaXNzaW9uIHRvIGFueSBtZWRpdW0gb3IgZm9ybWF0IGZvciB0aGUgcHVycG9zZSBvZiBwcmVzZXJ2YXRpb24uCgpZb3UgYWxzbyBhZ3JlZSB0aGF0IHRoZSBVTyBMaWJyYXJpZXMgbWF5IGtlZXAgbW9yZSB0aGFuIG9uZSBjb3B5IG9mCnRoaXMgc3VibWlzc2lvbiBmb3IgcHVycG9zZXMgb2Ygc2VjdXJpdHksIGJhY2stdXAgYW5kIHByZXNlcnZhdGlvbi4KVGhlIExpYnJhcmllcyB3aWxsIG1ha2UgYSBnb29kIGZhaXRoIGVmZm9ydCB0byBwcmVzZXJ2ZSBhbmQgZGlzdHJpYnV0ZQp0aGlzIHN1Ym1pc3Npb24uICBJbiB0aGUgZXZlbnQgdGhhdCB0aGUgTGlicmFyaWVzIGFyZSB1bmFibGUgdG8gY29udGludWUKdG8gbWFpbnRhaW4gdGhpcyBzdWJtaXNzaW9uIGFzIHBhcnQgb2YgdGhlIGluc3RpdHV0aW9uYWwgcmVwb3NpdG9yeSwKdGhlIExpYnJhcmllcyByZXNlcnZlIHRoZSByaWdodCB0byByZXR1cm4gdGhlIGNvbnRlbnQgdG8gdGhlIHN1Ym1pdHRpbmcKZGVwYXJ0bWVudHMvdW5pdHMvaW5kaXZpZHVhbHMuIElmIHRoZSBlbnRpdHkgaXMgbm8gbG9uZ2VyIGluIGV4aXN0ZW5jZSwKb3IgaWYgdGhlIGluZGl2aWR1YWwgaXMgdW50cmFjZWFibGUsIHRoZSBMaWJyYXJpZXMgd2lsbCBhcnJhbmdlIHRvIGhhdmUKdGhlIG1hdGVyaWFscyBhcHByYWlzZWQgYW5kIHBvc3NpYmx5IGFyY2hpdmVkIGFzIHBhcnQgb2YgdGhlIHVuaXZlcnNpdHkncwpkaWdpdGFsIGFyY2hpdmVzLgoKWW91IHJlcHJlc2VudCB0aGF0IHRoZSBzdWJtaXNzaW9uIGlzIHlvdXIgb3JpZ2luYWwgd29yaywgYW5kIHRoYXQgeW91CmhhdmUgdGhlIHJpZ2h0IHRvIGdyYW50IHRoZSByaWdodHMgY29udGFpbmVkIGluIHRoaXMgbGljZW5zZS4gWW91IGFsc28KcmVwcmVzZW50IHRoYXQgeW91ciBzdWJtaXNzaW9uIGRvZXMgbm90LCB0byB0aGUgYmVzdCBvZiB5b3VyIGtub3dsZWRnZSwKaW5mcmluZ2UgdXBvbiBhbnlvbmUncyBjb3B5cmlnaHQuCgpJZiB0aGUgc3VibWlzc2lvbiBjb250YWlucyBtYXRlcmlhbCBmb3Igd2hpY2ggeW91IGRvIG5vdCBob2xkIGNvcHlyaWdodCwKeW91IHJlcHJlc2VudCB0aGF0IHlvdSBoYXZlIG9idGFpbmVkIGFueSBuZWNlc3NhcnkgcGVybWlzc2lvbiBmcm9tIHRoZQpjb3B5cmlnaHQgb3duZXIgdG8gZ3JhbnQgVU8gdGhlIHJpZ2h0cyByZXF1aXJlZCBieSB0aGlzIGxpY2Vuc2UsIGFuZCAKdGhhdCBzdWNoIHRoaXJkLXBhcnR5IG93bmVkIG1hdGVyaWFsIGlzIGNsZWFybHkgaWRlbnRpZmllZCBhbmQKYWNrbm93bGVkZ2VkIHdpdGhpbiB0aGUgdGV4dCBvciBjb250ZW50IG9mIHRoZSBzdWJtaXNzaW9uLgoKSUYgVEhFIFNVQk1JU1NJT04gSVMgQkFTRUQgVVBPTiBXT1JLIFRIQVQgSEFTIEJFRU4gU1BPTlNPUkVEIE9SIFNVUFBPUlRFRApCWSBBTiBBR0VOQ1kgT1IgT1JHQU5JWkFUSU9OIE9USEVSIFRIQU4gVU8sIFlPVSBSRVBSRVNFTlQgVEhBVCBZT1UgSEFWRQpGVUxGSUxMRUQgQU5ZIFJJR0hUIE9GIFJFVklFVyBPUiBPVEhFUiBPQkxJR0FUSU9OUyBSRVFVSVJFRCBCWSBTVUNICkNPTlRSQUNUIE9SIEFHUkVFTUVOVC4KClVPIHdpbGwgY2xlYXJseSBpZGVudGlmeSB5b3VyIG5hbWUocykgYXMgdGhlIGF1dGhvcihzKSBvciBvd25lcihzKSBvZgp0aGUgc3VibWlzc2lvbiwgYW5kIHdpbGwgbm90IG1ha2UgYW55IGFsdGVyYXRpb24sIG90aGVyIHRoYW4gYXMgYWxsb3dlZApieSB0aGlzIGxpY2Vuc2UsIHRvIHlvdXIgc3VibWlzc2lvbi4K
URL
http://scholarsbank.uoregon.edu/xmlui/bitstream/1794/20128/1/Jepson_Sullivan_Andrew_2016.pdf
File
MD5
3db0c9180930f891b6f73001f0256710
9810021
application/pdf
Jepson_Sullivan_Andrew_2016.pdf
URL
http://scholarsbank.uoregon.edu/xmlui/bitstream/1794/20128/3/Jepson_Sullivan_Andrew_2016.pdf.txt
File
MD5
539c6181f26de93b14429efc7a4e7cc8
108599
text/plain
Jepson_Sullivan_Andrew_2016.pdf.txt
oai:scholarsbank.uoregon.edu:1794/236662018-08-26T07:30:41Zcom_1794_7553com_1794_7552com_1794_7550col_1794_10476
Scholars' Bank at the Knight Library
author
Chen, Lin (Flora)
2018-08-25T23:14:11Z
2018-08-25T23:14:11Z
2018-08-25
http://hdl.handle.net/1794/23666
In our rapidly densifying urban environment, diversifying
family types, and evolving urban demographics, it is of great
value to reconsider ways to design residential landscapes that
are adaptable to natural and cultural changes. This project
interprets Gilles Clément’s one approach—The Planetary
Garden, and two theories—The Garden in Movement and
The Third Landscape, to develop design strategies that
create interconnected spaces with a gradient of scales and
functions. These strategies were tested on Parkmerced, a
multi-family residential community located in San Francisco,
California, completed in 1951. Four proposed design
elements create flexible boundaries, permeable surfaces,
interconnected pathways, and dynamic vegetation that
could easily be altered and accommodate for future change.
Parkmerced is on the verge of a long-term redevelopment
and this project proposes an alternative approach that would
retrofit a 20th-century modernist landscape into a culturally
and environmentally adaptable 21st-century urban residential
landscape.
Creative Commons BY-NC-ND 4.0-US
Boundaries in Movement: Designing for an adaptable 21st-century multi-family residential landscape
Terminal Project
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
URL
http://scholarsbank.uoregon.edu/xmlui/bitstream/1794/23666/1/Chen_Lin_Flora_2018.pdf
File
MD5
e91e807d3323ff313b5be2768a807add
57857443
application/pdf
Chen_Lin_Flora_2018.pdf
URL
http://scholarsbank.uoregon.edu/xmlui/bitstream/1794/23666/3/Chen_Lin_Flora_2018.pdf.txt
File
MD5
6cd6074e1cb6125cb8febefe68cd273d
135614
text/plain
Chen_Lin_Flora_2018.pdf.txt
oai:scholarsbank.uoregon.edu:1794/285162023-07-31T23:14:59Zcom_1794_7553com_1794_7552com_1794_7550col_1794_10476
Scholars' Bank at the Knight Library
advisor
O'Neal, Jennifer
author
Graham, Grace
2023-07-10T21:15:52Z
2023-07-10T21:15:52Z
2023-06
https://scholarsbank.uoregon.edu/xmlui/handle/1794/28516
0009-0000-7073-1640
This project engages with issues of Indigenous recognition, resurgence, and futurity at the University of Oregon through the lens of landscape design. By applying a relational approach to the design process that is grounded in Indigenous research methods, Grace uncovers the principles at the root of the University’s current campus planning structures and empowers Indigenous community members to reimagine them through their own lived experiences. Through this work, Grace hopes to ignite a larger conversation about the need to center Indigenous knowledge and leadership at institutions of higher education, and across the landscape architecture discipline.
en
Creative Commons BY-NC-ND 4.0-US
indigenous
reclamation
design
campus
Indigenous Resurgence on the University of Oregon Campus: Reclamation through Relational Landscape Design
Thesis / Dissertation
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
URL
https://scholarsbank.uoregon.edu/xmlui/bitstream/1794/28516/3/MLA_GRAHAM_ScholarsBank_20230723.pdf
File
MD5
1a0d302c99fb075cf1c881b257c7c57d
143087063
application/pdf
MLA_GRAHAM_ScholarsBank_20230723.pdf
URL
https://scholarsbank.uoregon.edu/xmlui/bitstream/1794/28516/4/MLA_GRAHAM_ScholarsBank_20230723.pdf.txt
File
MD5
076cd5c2f6d447587edf8a0f4b13216e
454211
text/plain
MLA_GRAHAM_ScholarsBank_20230723.pdf.txt
oai:scholarsbank.uoregon.edu:1794/261232021-03-25T07:23:00Zcom_1794_7553com_1794_7552com_1794_7550col_1794_10476
Scholars' Bank at the Knight Library
author
Andrus, Erica
2021-03-24T18:50:37Z
2021-03-24T18:50:37Z
2021-03-24
https://scholarsbank.uoregon.edu/xmlui/handle/1794/26123
Introducing trail systems into a protected natural area that has undergone habitat
restoration sends alarms to ecologists and cheers from avid hikers. Habitat
assessments help map which plants and animals need protection; however, it is
difficult to translate this information to the trail design process. There is a need for an
approach to trail design that views habitats as a dynamic relationships between species
across scales, space, and time. This project introduces a framework that addresses the
often-overlooked challenge of not only which species to design for, but also when
specific design strategies are appropriate. Through temporal and spatial mapping this
project examines sensitive times of plants’ and animals’ life cycles and their expected
response to an introduction of trails. This mapping supported the creation of a
framework that allows designers to evaluate and prioritize options for future public
trails in ecologically rich landscapes. This research uses the Willamette Confluence
Preserve in Springfield, Oregon, where public trails currently do not exist, as a site to
test the feasibility of this framework. This new framework is transferrable to use on
other sites and habitat types and is an opportunity for future research.
en_US
Creative Commons BY-NC-ND 4.0-US
hiking
trails
trail planning
animal habitat
plant habitat
restoration
Trails for the Three of Us: Trail Design Planning Using Temporal and Dynamic Relationships Between Plants, Animals, and Hikers
Terminal Project
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
URL
http://scholarsbank.uoregon.edu/xmlui/bitstream/1794/26123/1/Andrus_Erica_2020.pdf
File
MD5
2e8d23ea1d0c4554640854f3995422f2
66961260
application/pdf
Andrus_Erica_2020.pdf
URL
http://scholarsbank.uoregon.edu/xmlui/bitstream/1794/26123/3/Andrus_Erica_2020.pdf.txt
File
MD5
d37e681aa29de8f169af8d3d3e2ea3e0
143887
text/plain
Andrus_Erica_2020.pdf.txt
oai:scholarsbank.uoregon.edu:1794/202512017-08-15T17:56:25Zcom_1794_7553com_1794_7552com_1794_7550col_1794_10476
Scholars' Bank at the Knight Library
author
Jorgensen, Matthew R.
2016-10-07T20:17:02Z
2016-10-07T20:17:02Z
2016-06-10
http://hdl.handle.net/1794/20251
Our climate is now changing at an alarming and measurable rate. The next century will bring
changes with a speed we have not yet experienced, and it is imperative that we preemptively
address projected effects. The focus of this project is on the rising temperature caused by climate
change, and the associated impacts that come with it, as they relate to the trees of the University
of Oregon campus. At this time, higher education institutions and municipalities are only just
beginning to think about and establish plans regarding our long term landscape. Currently, the
University of Oregon does not have an established method for identifying tree species which
will be vulnerable to climate change. This has the potential to significantly alter the campus
landscape, particularly with respect to prominent species. This project develops a matrix that
can be used to identify tree species that are vulnerable to climate change, as well as evaluate
potential replacement species. Application of the matrix identifies the three most prominent
campus species (based on specimen count) that are vulnerable to the impacts of climate change:
Betula papyrifera, Acer platanoides, and Pseudotsuga menziesii. Pseudotsuga menziesii is used
as an example to identify potential replacement species, followed by use of the matrix to select a
replacement with reduced vulnerability to climate change. As large landscape plantings such as
trees help to create a specific feeling of place, this project also explores the possibility of a changed
campus character when transitioned to less vulnerable species. Replacement species selection is
directed by finding candidates which have visual qualities similar to the vulnerable species, with
the goal of minimizing a change to the current campus character. This is investigated through the
use of hand and digital media to compare the qualities of the existing vulnerable species with those
of the proposed replacement species. The method and application from this project are readily
transferable to institutional and municipal settings in order to aid in: identifying species that are
vulnerable to climate change, selecting and confirming suitability of replacement species, and
visualizing replacement species in the landscape.
en_US
Creative Commons BY-NC-ND 4.0-US
Climate change
Betula papyrifera
Acer platanoides
Pseudotsuga menziesii
Vulnerable species
Vulnerability to Climate Change: Assessing Trees on the University of Oregon Campus
Terminal Project
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
URL
http://scholarsbank.uoregon.edu/xmlui/bitstream/1794/20251/1/climate_change_tree_assessment_uoregon_Jorgensen.pdf
File
MD5
03c7a18237bafa0f9be86a2c954265ec
12487382
application/pdf
climate_change_tree_assessment_uoregon_Jorgensen.pdf
URL
http://scholarsbank.uoregon.edu/xmlui/bitstream/1794/20251/3/climate_change_tree_assessment_uoregon_Jorgensen.pdf.txt
File
MD5
e68878a29619200ad1dc285ea127e3d8
140453
text/plain
climate_change_tree_assessment_uoregon_Jorgensen.pdf.txt
oai:scholarsbank.uoregon.edu:1794/236672018-09-28T17:51:45Zcom_1794_7553com_1794_7552com_1794_7550col_1794_10476
Scholars' Bank at the Knight Library
author
Hawthorne, Chad
2018-08-25T23:20:44Z
2018-08-25T23:20:44Z
2018-08-25
http://hdl.handle.net/1794/23667
Butterfly populations face many challenges, none so great as the loss of
habitat do to urbanization. The practice of clearing native vegetation and
replacing it with an exotic plant palette forces many urban butterflies further
and further from human development. This habitat loss can be mitigated by
strategically planning and designing urban butterfly gardens. The question
then arises, how can these butterfly gardens be designed to best insure
butterfly survival. Through this master’s project I introduce a methodological
process framework for the designing of urban butterfly habitat gardens. This
process centers on design strategies based on butterfly life histories of the
butterfly life cycle, butterfly needs, and butterfly behaviors. Employing the
design strategy of research through designing, this master’s project
demonstrates how designers can employ this framework to ensure the
survival of urban butterflies. To accomplish this goal, I have first produced a
guidebook that walks the reader through this step by step process of using
butterfly life histories to design butterfly gardens. I then demonstrate how to
use the design process by employing the methodological framework on a site
within the city of Eugene, Oregon. I assert, that through a detailed
examination of butterfly life histories, design elements can be generated to
better meet the survival needs of urban butterflies.
Creative Commons BY-NC-ND 4.0-US
Butterfly gardening
Butterfly
Butterfly life histories
Research through designing
And Then There Were Butterflies: Using Butterfly Life Histories to Design for Urban Butterfly Habitat Gardens
Terminal Project
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
URL
http://scholarsbank.uoregon.edu/xmlui/bitstream/1794/23667/1/Hawthorne_Chad_2018.pdf
File
MD5
fa42fa0bed3024afd209f3fd0f3c60f3
28573297
application/pdf
Hawthorne_Chad_2018.pdf
URL
http://scholarsbank.uoregon.edu/xmlui/bitstream/1794/23667/3/Hawthorne_Chad_2018.pdf.txt
File
MD5
51def0c4e9b58de65b35f62063b7bf03
497073
text/plain
Hawthorne_Chad_2018.pdf.txt
oai:scholarsbank.uoregon.edu:1794/236652018-08-28T17:21:11Zcom_1794_7553com_1794_7552com_1794_7550col_1794_10476
Scholars' Bank at the Knight Library
author
Carr, Alden
2018-08-25T23:06:42Z
2018-08-25T23:06:42Z
2018-08-25
http://hdl.handle.net/1794/23665
Extending the workflow of Building Information Modeling (BIM) to the field of
landscape architecture has significantly improved the workflow across design
disciplines. This project explores how BIM can assist landscape architects in
innovative planning for site scale storm and wastewater systems.
As a proof of concept, this project produced three redevelopment plans for
the Saginaw Mobile Home Park in Saginaw, Oregon. The design goals created
strategies for providing equitable living spaces for maintaining manufactured
home parks as a type of affordable housing.
BIM was pivotal in the design process as early schematic designs were able
to tabulate and inform sizing and locations of stormwater treatment facilities
based on the site-specific geospatial information. As the design process refined
the level of detail, results were continuously re-evaluated to inform the design
process and adhere to the site needs.
Creative Commons BY-NC-ND 4.0-US
BIM-Scapes: Framework for Modeling Site Scale Through Design
Terminal Project
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
URL
http://scholarsbank.uoregon.edu/xmlui/bitstream/1794/23665/1/Carr_Alden_2018.pdf
File
MD5
7d92d3acf511c027e044b7e8417b7f58
7066257
application/pdf
Carr_Alden_2018.pdf
URL
http://scholarsbank.uoregon.edu/xmlui/bitstream/1794/23665/3/Carr_Alden_2018.pdf.txt
File
MD5
0a925c08db1d15ec8c27b3bd727717c6
82278
text/plain
Carr_Alden_2018.pdf.txt
oai:scholarsbank.uoregon.edu:1794/236712018-08-28T17:13:07Zcom_1794_7553com_1794_7552com_1794_7550col_1794_10476
Scholars' Bank at the Knight Library
author
Murphy, Brittany
2018-08-25T23:41:38Z
2018-08-25T23:41:38Z
2018-08-25
http://hdl.handle.net/1794/23671
Urban green stormwater infrastructure facilities come in many forms, which include
variation in the number and types of plant species. How plant diversity in stormwater
facilities is perceived and valued by the public, stormwater professionals, and designers
remains in question.
This project investigates whether plant diversity in small scale urban sites (curbside
stormwater planters) is preferred by local residents and designers, how this preference
might be related to overall attitudes about water management issues, and how the
preferences of current and future designers differ from local residents. This study consists
of two survey tests: a visual preference test, and an awareness and attitudes test. There are
three participant groups from Eugene, OR: residents living close to a stormwater planter,
stormwater professionals, and landscape architecture students at the University of Oregon.
The results reveal the respondents’ visual preference for plant diversity, understanding of
stormwater planter function, and their awareness of watershed issues.
Survey results were then used to inform proposed planting designs for a stormwater planter
in Eugene. I explore how designers can approach stormwater facility planting design in
ways that are responsive to both professional and public preferences.
Creative Commons BY-NC-ND 4.0-US
Stormwater design
Visual preference
Survey
Planting design
Stormwater planters
Using Visual Preference Surveys to Inform Planting Design in Stormwater Planters
Terminal Project
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
URL
http://scholarsbank.uoregon.edu/xmlui/bitstream/1794/23671/1/Murphy_Brittany_2018.pdf
File
MD5
b2772693c40b060681c0e139aa46fad7
11122302
application/pdf
Murphy_Brittany_2018.pdf
URL
http://scholarsbank.uoregon.edu/xmlui/bitstream/1794/23671/3/Murphy_Brittany_2018.pdf.txt
File
MD5
d408d8c88bff8da8172dfc29a27edea6
128481
text/plain
Murphy_Brittany_2018.pdf.txt
oai:scholarsbank.uoregon.edu:1794/263452021-06-14T07:22:33Zcom_1794_7553com_1794_7552com_1794_7550col_1794_10476
Scholars' Bank at the Knight Library
author
Parr, Kristine
2021-06-13T22:39:45Z
2021-06-13T22:39:45Z
2021-06-13
https://scholarsbank.uoregon.edu/xmlui/handle/1794/26345
The benefit of both urban agriculture and therapeutic gardens are historically
acknowledged and legitimized in landscape architecture. In their own ways
they seek to address issues of resiliency and quality of life. However, there
is little cross-pollination between landscape designs that provide nourishing
produce and those that nourish mental and emotional wellbeing. This is
especially true for children’s landscapes, whose school environments are
known for their unhealthy lunches and fluorescent classrooms. Mapping food
insecurity shows that many students within Eugene’s urban growth boundary
are vulnerable in the current systems of scarcity. They are placed at the
forefront of both food insecurity and corresponding mental developmental
crises; all exacerbated by stressors associated with COVID-19. Therefore,
envisioning schools as whimsical oases of accessible, foraged produce and
inclusive beauty could richly impact Eugene communities as a whole. Placing
a ½ mile radius over every school doubled the footprint of access to fresh food
and therapeutic spaces. Therefore, the proposed “toolkit of parts” features
combined agricultural and therapeutic elements in the forms of Community
Learning Circles, Medicinal Food Meadows and Healing Food Forests. Each
piece, and their many possible configurations, builds gracious, inclusive and
adaptable school gardens as bountiful community hubs.
en_US
Creative Commons BY-NC-ND 4.0-US
therapeutic garden
edible city
food security
food security
Of Playgrounds, Produce and Peace: A Toolkit of Parts for Edible Therapeutic School Gardens and Envisioning Community Hubs
Terminal Project
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
URL
http://scholarsbank.uoregon.edu/xmlui/bitstream/1794/26345/1/Parr_Kristine_2021.pdf
File
MD5
9ca47b648716358dcd4edc866da780e5
26093808
application/pdf
Parr_Kristine_2021.pdf
URL
http://scholarsbank.uoregon.edu/xmlui/bitstream/1794/26345/3/Parr_Kristine_2021.pdf.txt
File
MD5
c51e83c28a075c474810354bfd287c79
270080
text/plain
Parr_Kristine_2021.pdf.txt
oai:scholarsbank.uoregon.edu:1794/225032017-07-10T08:03:54Zcom_1794_7553com_1794_7552com_1794_7550col_1794_10476
Scholars' Bank at the Knight Library
author
Poranski, Colin
2017-07-10T02:18:41Z
2017-07-10T02:18:41Z
2017-07-09
http://hdl.handle.net/1794/22503
A translation of the Jerusalem pilgrimage site of the
Via Dolorosa (the path followed by Christ over the
course of his Passion), the Stations of the Cross is
a vitally important practice, a frequent subject of
art and design, and a prevailing landscape type
of the Roman Catholic Church. While individual
sets of Stations have been written about from the
perspective of art and architectural history, virtually
no critical attention has been paid to the subject
from a landscape architecture perspective. This
lacuna is at odds with the nature of the Stations as
a religious rite: a translation of the Via Dolorosa from
one place to another, the Stations are a discrete
landscape phenomenon—a consistent configuration
of elements in space intended to replicate a specific
landscape experience. Historically, the fundamental
structure of this sacred landscape has been entirely
linear: a series of fourteen focal points separated
by paths. The aesthetic interpretation of those
points constitutes the chief stylistic innovation of
the Stations over the centuries, but the underlying
conception of space has not been recognized. The
advent of Modernism in landscape architecture
radically upended designers’ understanding of
landscape space, while modernist revolutions in
sacred art, architecture, and American Catholicism
similarly reframed expectations demanded of
designed sacred spaces. After outlining a set of
principals defining a modernist conception of the
Stations of the Cross, this project uses a researchthrough-
designing process to create a proposal for
a Stations of the Cross garden at the Notre Dame
Spirituality Center in Ipswich, MA. The end products,
a site-scaled design and a thorough documentation
of the design process, speak to the potential of
research-through-designing strategies as a means
of translating abstract interdisciplinary concepts into
the on-the-ground language of landscape.
en_US
Creative Commons BY-NC-ND 4.0-US
The Ipswich Stations: a landscape way of the cross
Terminal Project
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
URL
http://scholarsbank.uoregon.edu/xmlui/bitstream/1794/22503/1/Poranski_Colin_2017.pdf
File
MD5
fa03fac1d3633d94069fbb60786b535d
40788472
application/pdf
Poranski_Colin_2017.pdf
URL
http://scholarsbank.uoregon.edu/xmlui/bitstream/1794/22503/3/Poranski_Colin_2017.pdf.txt
File
MD5
07e2d18fdcc29f89c3350ec8629d6a18
158591
text/plain
Poranski_Colin_2017.pdf.txt
oai:scholarsbank.uoregon.edu:1794/285072023-07-31T22:40:13Zcom_1794_7553com_1794_7552com_1794_7550col_1794_10476
Scholars' Bank at the Knight Library
advisor
Ribe, Rob
author
Hagen-Botbol, Sabina
2023-07-10T20:51:28Z
2023-07-10T20:51:28Z
2023-06
https://scholarsbank.uoregon.edu/xmlui/handle/1794/28507
0009-0006-4466-4353
In an effort to live with a deeper sense of community, this design project seeks to explore the concept of cohousing, with the intention to integrate social and ecological reciprocity. In applying the lens of landscape architecture, this interconnection would extend to the landscape, and ecosystems. By consciously recognizing this broader, more encompassing, view of community, forming cohousing communities becomes an endeavor that incorporates our inherent responsibilities of being a good neighbor socially and ecologically, forming relationships of reciprocity rather than systems of commodification. These concepts are applied to create a concept design for a cohousing community in Fall Creek, Oregon. This project aims to design a site to promote living with a deeper sense of community by integrating social and ecological relationships for enhanced quality of life.
en
Creative Commons BY-NC-ND 4.0-US
cohousing
ecological
reciprocity
social
Cohousing to Catalyse Social and Ecological Networks of Reciprocity
Thesis / Dissertation
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
URL
https://scholarsbank.uoregon.edu/xmlui/bitstream/1794/28507/1/hagenbotbol_2023.pdf
File
MD5
49957a0c1ab0da8f2caf6ee20ad0f776
51471593
application/pdf
hagenbotbol_2023.pdf
URL
https://scholarsbank.uoregon.edu/xmlui/bitstream/1794/28507/3/hagenbotbol_2023.pdf.txt
File
MD5
580237b1adf68d8b3326b79cc35a1b41
28161
text/plain
hagenbotbol_2023.pdf.txt
oai:scholarsbank.uoregon.edu:1794/236692018-08-28T17:09:16Zcom_1794_7553com_1794_7552com_1794_7550col_1794_10476
Scholars' Bank at the Knight Library
author
Kau, Justin
2018-08-25T23:30:34Z
2018-08-25T23:30:34Z
2018-08-25
http://hdl.handle.net/1794/23669
is project examines the potential applicability of Video Game
Engines to the representation of landscape architectural designs.
Video Game Engines present a unique and novel format for design
representation in that they allow subjects to have an immersive
dynamic experience navigating within a digital construct of a
designed site.
is project collected visual preference data through an online
survey comparing the representational formats of digitally
rendered two-dimensional imagery against dynamic Game Engines
simulations at distinct levels of Design Intent and Textural Detail.
is multivariate approach to survey content allows for a more
robust and dynamic response analysis. While the survey responses
do not indicate that Game Engines are more e ective at representing
design, the dynamic nature of the research framework allow the
findings to illuminate interesting trends that have implications for
future implementation of this technology.
Game Engine technology has recently become easily accessible,
but there is little existing research on Game Engine applicability
for design representation. is research is intended to explore
how Game Engine technology compares in representing landscape
design, and provide insight for future research.
Creative Commons BY-NC-ND 4.0-US
Gaming the Landscape: The Potential Applicability of Game Engines for Design Representation
Terminal Project
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
URL
http://scholarsbank.uoregon.edu/xmlui/bitstream/1794/23669/1/Kau_Justin_2018.pdf
File
MD5
3f09a5684be633f6e93636b8ab212573
12507554
application/pdf
Kau_Justin_2018.pdf
URL
http://scholarsbank.uoregon.edu/xmlui/bitstream/1794/23669/3/Kau_Justin_2018.pdf.txt
File
MD5
87665ebd1ac24a1e17c0341efd054ca9
109818
text/plain
Kau_Justin_2018.pdf.txt
oai:scholarsbank.uoregon.edu:1794/289982023-10-18T07:34:52Zcom_1794_7553com_1794_7552com_1794_7550col_1794_10476
Scholars' Bank at the Knight Library
author
Lorber, Stephen
2023-10-17T21:25:45Z
2023-10-17T21:25:45Z
2022-05
https://scholarsbank.uoregon.edu/xmlui/handle/1794/28998
There are thousands of current and former extraction sites in Oregon. These sites on this tour represent larger themes at play in Oregon’s aggregate extraction network. As we follow a trail of Oregon aggregate, themes are developed that allow this expansive and complex system to become distilled into a conceptual framework.
Aggregates start with the source material, and for Oregon, that material is almost exclusively Basalt or Sand + Gravel. How these materials differ would become apparent as we move through the tour. The aggregate supply chain is relatively simple. Extraction sites most often act as storage and distribution hubs that go directly to development, so it is easily distilled into a line segment with two points – source and destination. It’s an easily self-replicating model of material production. The supply chain is almost relatively short – 90% of aggregate comes from within 35 miles of the project site. In a world of hyper-globalization, where precious minerals cross borders easier than humans, benign aggregate remains local. And with it, the problematic reverberations of extraction can’t be outsourced either.
The supply chain of source to destination is a simple explanation of aggregate extraction, however it doesn’t contain space for memory or projections into the future. Mines are finite - they have skeletons. There are also projections for the next iteration of the segment to begin.
The sites on this tour show sources and destinations, as well as post-use sites and prospective extraction sites. This tour asks the viewer to consider the connection between the rural, exemplified by Oakridge, and the urban, represented by Eugene. As we move between these two regions, it’s important to meditate on who benefits from the sites on this tour and where the aggregate materials eventually flow.
As someone on this tour, it’s also important to be cognizant of how the urban extends itself into the rural – and of how the urban’s extension – done to build its own cultural framework – relates to the shaping of cultural frameworks in rural communities.
We might not own these sites, but these voids, structures, and empty fields are made by us all. As we move through this tour, I ask you to be reflexive - to think about how these sites intertwine with your life, how your dreams of a future necessitate the expansion of this network, and to think about how we can actively shift the processes to better align with how we want to see out world grow.
en
Creative Commons BY-NC-ND 4.0-US
Oregon
extraction sites
aggregate supply chain
aggregate extraction
rural communities
A.R.E.A.M. AGGREGATE RULES EVERYTHING AROUND ME: A CRITICAL TOUR OF AN AGGREGATE NETWORK
Terminal Project
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
URL
https://scholarsbank.uoregon.edu/xmlui/bitstream/1794/28998/4/Presentation_final.pdf
File
MD5
bf9029752b2b42d45d52564bc93da4be
6178611
application/pdf
Presentation_final.pdf
URL
https://scholarsbank.uoregon.edu/xmlui/bitstream/1794/28998/3/Guidebook.pdf
File
MD5
c6d1053d9e9f0b5f0b0c7e51ea81b01f
6998065
application/pdf
Guidebook.pdf
URL
https://scholarsbank.uoregon.edu/xmlui/bitstream/1794/28998/1/Presentation_Script_final.pdf
File
MD5
ee04ddb8a579b516027aa0cbb5bfb4f9
186059
application/pdf
Presentation_Script_final.pdf
URL
https://scholarsbank.uoregon.edu/xmlui/bitstream/1794/28998/2/Tour_narration_final.pdf
File
MD5
e3f7efbbe8b74e23c5af42bc3dee0008
303077
application/pdf
Tour_narration_final.pdf
URL
https://scholarsbank.uoregon.edu/xmlui/bitstream/1794/28998/6/Presentation_final.pdf.txt
File
MD5
350a2cad8823f1242d5dffc6454a2b5d
6761
text/plain
Presentation_final.pdf.txt
URL
https://scholarsbank.uoregon.edu/xmlui/bitstream/1794/28998/7/Guidebook.pdf.txt
File
MD5
816b5c6b604fce8326612c5eb5b32c1a
15634
text/plain
Guidebook.pdf.txt
URL
https://scholarsbank.uoregon.edu/xmlui/bitstream/1794/28998/8/Presentation_Script_final.pdf.txt
File
MD5
a7ed6e27a9114a09139f5f839eebb6dd
9713
text/plain
Presentation_Script_final.pdf.txt
URL
https://scholarsbank.uoregon.edu/xmlui/bitstream/1794/28998/9/Tour_narration_final.pdf.txt
File
MD5
17affe92e862fb22f359c15e4ee28c68
35797
text/plain
Tour_narration_final.pdf.txt
oai:scholarsbank.uoregon.edu:1794/263372021-06-14T07:22:06Zcom_1794_7553com_1794_7552com_1794_7550col_1794_10476
Scholars' Bank at the Knight Library
author
Fitzpatrick, Caroline
2021-06-13T21:21:19Z
2021-06-13T21:21:19Z
2021-06-13
https://scholarsbank.uoregon.edu/xmlui/handle/1794/26337
In an urgent call for climate actions and a Green New Deal, policy such
as the “Ocean-Based Climate Solutions Act of 2020” looks to offshore
renewable energy to aid in the goal of a clean electricity system while
also looking to restoration and conservation of blue carbon habitats,
prioritization of regenerative ocean farming, and protection of front-line
communities. In recent years, off-shore wind has been pursued across
the world as a promising way to mitigate climate change.
The history of green-on-green conflicts point to how poor planning of
large-scale renewable energy infrastructure and lack of community
engagement leads to compromise in protecting critical habitats and
communities. To address this challenge, this project questions how
landscape architecture can play a key role in serving the interests of
public and local stakeholders while addressing the green-on green
conflicts around renewable energy development.
I offer a landscape approach which combines multi stakeholder and
multifunctional landscape techniques through a systems thinking
approach. This project shows how this multi-functional landscape
framework contributes to creating environmental, social, and economic
synergies around off-shore wind farm development in the era of climate
change
en_US
Creative Commons BY-NC-ND 4.0-US
multifunctional landscapes
systems thinking
multi-stakeholder engagement
renewable energy
offshore wind
landscape approach
A Landscape Approach to Multifunctional Floating Offshore Wind Energy in Coos Bay, Oregon
Technical Report
Tk9OLUVYQ0xVU0lWRSBESVNUUklCVVRJT04gTElDRU5TRQoKQnkgc2lnbmluZyBhbmQgc3VibWl0dGluZyB0aGlzIGxpY2Vuc2UsIHlvdSAodGhlIGF1dGhvcihzKSBvciBjb3B5cmlnaHQKb3duZXIpIGdyYW50IHRvIHRoZSBVbml2ZXJzaXR5IG9mIE9yZWdvbiAoVU8pIHRoZSBub24tZXhjbHVzaXZlIHJpZ2h0IHRvCnJlcHJvZHVjZSwgY29udmVydCAoYXMgZGVmaW5lZCBiZWxvdyksIGFuZC9vciBkaXN0cmlidXRlIHlvdXIgc3VibWlzc2lvbgooaW5jbHVkaW5nIHRoZSBhYnN0cmFjdCkgd29ybGR3aWRlIGluIHByaW50IGFuZCBlbGVjdHJvbmljIGZvcm1hdCBhbmQKaW4gYW55IG1lZGl1bSwgaW5jbHVkaW5nIGJ1dCBub3QgbGltaXRlZCB0byBhdWRpbyBvciB2aWRlby4KCllvdSBhZ3JlZSB0aGF0IFVPIG1heSwgd2l0aG91dCBjaGFuZ2luZyB0aGUgY29udGVudCwgY29udmVydCB0aGUKc3VibWlzc2lvbiB0byBhbnkgbWVkaXVtIG9yIGZvcm1hdCBmb3IgdGhlIHB1cnBvc2Ugb2YgcHJlc2VydmF0aW9uLgoKWW91IGFsc28gYWdyZWUgdGhhdCB0aGUgVU8gTGlicmFyaWVzIG1heSBrZWVwIG1vcmUgdGhhbiBvbmUgY29weSBvZgp0aGlzIHN1Ym1pc3Npb24gZm9yIHB1cnBvc2VzIG9mIHNlY3VyaXR5LCBiYWNrLXVwIGFuZCBwcmVzZXJ2YXRpb24uClRoZSBMaWJyYXJpZXMgd2lsbCBtYWtlIGEgZ29vZCBmYWl0aCBlZmZvcnQgdG8gcHJlc2VydmUgYW5kIGRpc3RyaWJ1dGUKdGhpcyBzdWJtaXNzaW9uLiAgSW4gdGhlIGV2ZW50IHRoYXQgdGhlIExpYnJhcmllcyBhcmUgdW5hYmxlIHRvIGNvbnRpbnVlCnRvIG1haW50YWluIHRoaXMgc3VibWlzc2lvbiBhcyBwYXJ0IG9mIHRoZSBpbnN0aXR1dGlvbmFsIHJlcG9zaXRvcnksCnRoZSBMaWJyYXJpZXMgcmVzZXJ2ZSB0aGUgcmlnaHQgdG8gcmV0dXJuIHRoZSBjb250ZW50IHRvIHRoZSBzdWJtaXR0aW5nCmRlcGFydG1lbnRzL3VuaXRzL2luZGl2aWR1YWxzLiBJZiB0aGUgZW50aXR5IGlzIG5vIGxvbmdlciBpbiBleGlzdGVuY2UsCm9yIGlmIHRoZSBpbmRpdmlkdWFsIGlzIHVudHJhY2VhYmxlLCB0aGUgTGlicmFyaWVzIHdpbGwgYXJyYW5nZSB0byBoYXZlCnRoZSBtYXRlcmlhbHMgYXBwcmFpc2VkIGFuZCBwb3NzaWJseSBhcmNoaXZlZCBhcyBwYXJ0IG9mIHRoZSB1bml2ZXJzaXR5J3MKZGlnaXRhbCBhcmNoaXZlcy4KCllvdSByZXByZXNlbnQgdGhhdCB0aGUgc3VibWlzc2lvbiBpcyB5b3VyIG9yaWdpbmFsIHdvcmssIGFuZCB0aGF0IHlvdQpoYXZlIHRoZSByaWdodCB0byBncmFudCB0aGUgcmlnaHRzIGNvbnRhaW5lZCBpbiB0aGlzIGxpY2Vuc2UuIFlvdSBhbHNvCnJlcHJlc2VudCB0aGF0IHlvdXIgc3VibWlzc2lvbiBkb2VzIG5vdCwgdG8gdGhlIGJlc3Qgb2YgeW91ciBrbm93bGVkZ2UsCmluZnJpbmdlIHVwb24gYW55b25lJ3MgY29weXJpZ2h0LgoKSWYgdGhlIHN1Ym1pc3Npb24gY29udGFpbnMgbWF0ZXJpYWwgZm9yIHdoaWNoIHlvdSBkbyBub3QgaG9sZCBjb3B5cmlnaHQsCnlvdSByZXByZXNlbnQgdGhhdCB5b3UgaGF2ZSBvYnRhaW5lZCBhbnkgbmVjZXNzYXJ5IHBlcm1pc3Npb24gZnJvbSB0aGUKY29weXJpZ2h0IG93bmVyIHRvIGdyYW50IFVPIHRoZSByaWdodHMgcmVxdWlyZWQgYnkgdGhpcyBsaWNlbnNlLCBhbmQgCnRoYXQgc3VjaCB0aGlyZC1wYXJ0eSBvd25lZCBtYXRlcmlhbCBpcyBjbGVhcmx5IGlkZW50aWZpZWQgYW5kCmFja25vd2xlZGdlZCB3aXRoaW4gdGhlIHRleHQgb3IgY29udGVudCBvZiB0aGUgc3VibWlzc2lvbi4KCklGIFRIRSBTVUJNSVNTSU9OIElTIEJBU0VEIFVQT04gV09SSyBUSEFUIEhBUyBCRUVOIFNQT05TT1JFRCBPUiBTVVBQT1JURUQKQlkgQU4gQUdFTkNZIE9SIE9SR0FOSVpBVElPTiBPVEhFUiBUSEFOIFVPLCBZT1UgUkVQUkVTRU5UIFRIQVQgWU9VIEhBVkUKRlVMRklMTEVEIEFOWSBSSUdIVCBPRiBSRVZJRVcgT1IgT1RIRVIgT0JMSUdBVElPTlMgUkVRVUlSRUQgQlkgU1VDSApDT05UUkFDVCBPUiBBR1JFRU1FTlQuCgpVTyB3aWxsIGNsZWFybHkgaWRlbnRpZnkgeW91ciBuYW1lKHMpIGFzIHRoZSBhdXRob3Iocykgb3Igb3duZXIocykgb2YKdGhlIHN1Ym1pc3Npb24sIGFuZCB3aWxsIG5vdCBtYWtlIGFueSBhbHRlcmF0aW9uLCBvdGhlciB0aGFuIGFzIGFsbG93ZWQKYnkgdGhpcyBsaWNlbnNlLCB0byB5b3VyIHN1Ym1pc3Npb24uCgpQbGVhc2Ugbm90ZSB0aGF0IGVsZWN0cm9uaWMgdGhlc2VzIGFuZCBkaXNzZXJ0YXRpb25zIGNhbm5vdCBiZSB3aXRoZHJhd24KZnJvbSB0aGUgYXJjaGl2ZS4K
URL
http://scholarsbank.uoregon.edu/xmlui/bitstream/1794/26337/1/Fitzpatrick_Caroline_2021.pdf
File
MD5
4f09f179ccac3b0e253f6c623d2ec382
44395893
application/pdf
Fitzpatrick_Caroline_2021.pdf
URL
http://scholarsbank.uoregon.edu/xmlui/bitstream/1794/26337/3/Fitzpatrick_Caroline_2021.pdf.txt
File
MD5
952cea66ab8ddbb557fa8cad979cbddd
81621
text/plain
Fitzpatrick_Caroline_2021.pdf.txt
oai:scholarsbank.uoregon.edu:1794/236642018-08-28T17:02:54Zcom_1794_7553com_1794_7552com_1794_7550col_1794_10476
Scholars' Bank at the Knight Library
author
Barajas, Margo
2018-08-25T22:59:41Z
2018-08-25T22:59:41Z
2018-08-25
http://hdl.handle.net/1794/23664
At the heart of Portland, Maine is a 500-acre tidal bay framed by a linden tree-lined trail and boulevard. Back
Cove physically and visually defines the city and is regarded as an important natural, historical, and recreational
resource. However, data from the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration (NOAA) projects sea levels
in Back Cove to rise six feet over the next fifty years. This poses an immediate risk to the historic boulevard and
trail—originally designed by Olmsted, Olmsted & Eliot, the bordering low-lying neighborhoods, and the extensive network of stormwater and sewer pipes that outlet into the Cove. Additionally, it has been more than twenty years since the city of Portland has published a comprehensive master plan for Back Cove, which did not account for climate change and predates the most recent sea level rise projections.
This project engages in the constructivist ‘research-through-designing’ approach set forth by Lenzholzer,
Duchhart, and Koh (2013) that emphasizes the contextual role of physical and social environments. Methods used in support of this approach include literature review, interviews, site visits, and archival research. Values of historic and ecological integrity and four sea level rise design strategies guide the outcome—a master plan design for the year 2070, when NOAA projects sea levels to rise six feet at Back Cove, and focal area designs across multiple spatial and temporal scales.
Creative Commons BY-NC-ND 4.0-US
Sea level rise
Climate change
Landscape architecture
Portland, Maine
Back Cove
Olmsted
Marsh
Mudflat
Designing for Sea Level Rise; Back Cove, Portland, Maine
Terminal Project
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
URL
http://scholarsbank.uoregon.edu/xmlui/bitstream/1794/23664/1/Barajas_Margo_2018.pdf
File
MD5
e5e4e3f973c0540d5e0768f1c2231460
29040401
application/pdf
Barajas_Margo_2018.pdf
URL
http://scholarsbank.uoregon.edu/xmlui/bitstream/1794/23664/3/Barajas_Margo_2018.pdf.txt
File
MD5
1906eacb1987d7646c86ee98aaa13e48
113349
text/plain
Barajas_Margo_2018.pdf.txt
oai:scholarsbank.uoregon.edu:1794/236722019-03-28T20:54:55Zcom_1794_7553com_1794_7552com_1794_7550col_1794_10476
Scholars' Bank at the Knight Library
author
Quiroz, Nadja
2018-08-25T23:49:17Z
2018-08-25T23:49:17Z
2018-08-25
http://hdl.handle.net/1794/23672
Planning for uncertain, future climates has become a dominant framework
in resource management fields, and has recently expanded into cultural resource
strategies within the National Park Service (NPS). However, because the NPS views
material cultural resources, such as built features, as having no ability to change
with the environment, adaptive capacity has been omitted from the cultural resource
vulnerability assessment framework. Adaptive capacity contributes to a living system’s
ability to recover from and resist future impacts, thereby increasing its resilience.
By omitting adaptive capacity, recent preliminary cultural landscape vulnerability
assessments (VAs) excluded all resiliency considerations— an oversight that could
undermine cultural landscape comprehension and adaptive planning. This project
demonstrates that flood-resilient, culturally significant built features exist worldwide,
and that they embody climate change management insights. Objectives included
distilling resilience strategies from four case studies; applying these strategies to
design intervention thought-experiments for Scotty’s Castle, a flood-vulnerable
NPS cultural landscape; and assessing each intervention's resiliency and cultural
integrity trade-offs. Findings suggest that all realms of resiliency (ecological, social,
organizational, and engineering) should be factored into cultural landscape VAs, and
that truly adaptive planning requires tight coupling of management and resource subsystems.
Additional adaptive management implications are discussed.
Creative Commons BY-NC-ND 4.0-US
Resilience
Adaptive capacity
Cultural landscape
Adaptive management
Climate change
Social resilience
National Park Service
Historic rehabilitation
Historic preservation
Social ecological system
Flood resilience
Adaptive planning
Hazard cultures
Cultural adaptation
Katsura Imperial Vill
Kinderdijk
Living bridge
Cherrapunjee
Santa Cruz de Mompox
Resilience strategy
Kintsugi
Cultural landscape adaptation
Death Valley Scotty Historic District
Scotty's Castle
A Past Yet to Arrive
Terminal Project
Tk9URTogUExBQ0UgWU9VUiBPV04gTElDRU5TRSBIRVJFClRoaXMgc2FtcGxlIGxpY2Vuc2UgaXMgcHJvdmlkZWQgZm9yIGluZm9ybWF0aW9uYWwgcHVycG9zZXMgb25seS4KCk5PTi1FWENMVVNJVkUgRElTVFJJQlVUSU9OIExJQ0VOU0UKCkJ5IHNpZ25pbmcgYW5kIHN1Ym1pdHRpbmcgdGhpcyBsaWNlbnNlLCB5b3UgKHRoZSBhdXRob3Iocykgb3IgY29weXJpZ2h0Cm93bmVyKSBncmFudHMgdG8gdGhlIFVuaXZlcnNpdHkgb2YgT3JlZ29uIChVTykgdGhlIG5vbi1leGNsdXNpdmUgcmlnaHQgdG8KcmVwcm9kdWNlLCBjb252ZXJ0IChhcyBkZWZpbmVkIGJlbG93KSwgYW5kL29yIGRpc3RyaWJ1dGUgeW91ciBzdWJtaXNzaW9uCihpbmNsdWRpbmcgdGhlIGFic3RyYWN0KSB3b3JsZHdpZGUgaW4gcHJpbnQgYW5kIGVsZWN0cm9uaWMgZm9ybWF0IGFuZAppbiBhbnkgbWVkaXVtLCBpbmNsdWRpbmcgYnV0IG5vdCBsaW1pdGVkIHRvIGF1ZGlvIG9yIHZpZGVvLgoKWW91IGFncmVlIHRoYXQgVU8gbWF5LCB3aXRob3V0IGNoYW5naW5nIHRoZSBjb250ZW50LCBjb252ZXJ0IHRoZQpzdWJtaXNzaW9uIHRvIGFueSBtZWRpdW0gb3IgZm9ybWF0IGZvciB0aGUgcHVycG9zZSBvZiBwcmVzZXJ2YXRpb24uCgpZb3UgYWxzbyBhZ3JlZSB0aGF0IHRoZSBVTyBMaWJyYXJpZXMgbWF5IGtlZXAgbW9yZSB0aGFuIG9uZSBjb3B5IG9mCnRoaXMgc3VibWlzc2lvbiBmb3IgcHVycG9zZXMgb2Ygc2VjdXJpdHksIGJhY2stdXAgYW5kIHByZXNlcnZhdGlvbi4KVGhlIExpYnJhcmllcyB3aWxsIG1ha2UgYSBnb29kIGZhaXRoIGVmZm9ydCB0byBwcmVzZXJ2ZSBhbmQgZGlzdHJpYnV0ZQp0aGlzIHN1Ym1pc3Npb24uICBJbiB0aGUgZXZlbnQgdGhhdCB0aGUgTGlicmFyaWVzIGFyZSB1bmFibGUgdG8gY29udGludWUKdG8gbWFpbnRhaW4gdGhpcyBzdWJtaXNzaW9uIGFzIHBhcnQgb2YgdGhlIGluc3RpdHV0aW9uYWwgcmVwb3NpdG9yeSwKdGhlIExpYnJhcmllcyByZXNlcnZlIHRoZSByaWdodCB0byByZXR1cm4gdGhlIGNvbnRlbnQgdG8gdGhlIHN1Ym1pdHRpbmcKZGVwYXJ0bWVudHMvdW5pdHMvaW5kaXZpZHVhbHMuIElmIHRoZSBlbnRpdHkgaXMgbm8gbG9uZ2VyIGluIGV4aXN0ZW5jZSwKb3IgaWYgdGhlIGluZGl2aWR1YWwgaXMgdW50cmFjZWFibGUsIHRoZSBMaWJyYXJpZXMgd2lsbCBhcnJhbmdlIHRvIGhhdmUKdGhlIG1hdGVyaWFscyBhcHByYWlzZWQgYW5kIHBvc3NpYmx5IGFyY2hpdmVkIGFzIHBhcnQgb2YgdGhlIHVuaXZlcnNpdHkncwpkaWdpdGFsIGFyY2hpdmVzLgoKWW91IHJlcHJlc2VudCB0aGF0IHRoZSBzdWJtaXNzaW9uIGlzIHlvdXIgb3JpZ2luYWwgd29yaywgYW5kIHRoYXQgeW91CmhhdmUgdGhlIHJpZ2h0IHRvIGdyYW50IHRoZSByaWdodHMgY29udGFpbmVkIGluIHRoaXMgbGljZW5zZS4gWW91IGFsc28KcmVwcmVzZW50IHRoYXQgeW91ciBzdWJtaXNzaW9uIGRvZXMgbm90LCB0byB0aGUgYmVzdCBvZiB5b3VyIGtub3dsZWRnZSwKaW5mcmluZ2UgdXBvbiBhbnlvbmUncyBjb3B5cmlnaHQuCgpJZiB0aGUgc3VibWlzc2lvbiBjb250YWlucyBtYXRlcmlhbCBmb3Igd2hpY2ggeW91IGRvIG5vdCBob2xkIGNvcHlyaWdodCwKeW91IHJlcHJlc2VudCB0aGF0IHlvdSBoYXZlIG9idGFpbmVkIGFueSBuZWNlc3NhcnkgcGVybWlzc2lvbiBmcm9tIHRoZQpjb3B5cmlnaHQgb3duZXIgdG8gZ3JhbnQgVU8gdGhlIHJpZ2h0cyByZXF1aXJlZCBieSB0aGlzIGxpY2Vuc2UsIGFuZCAKdGhhdCBzdWNoIHRoaXJkLXBhcnR5IG93bmVkIG1hdGVyaWFsIGlzIGNsZWFybHkgaWRlbnRpZmllZCBhbmQKYWNrbm93bGVkZ2VkIHdpdGhpbiB0aGUgdGV4dCBvciBjb250ZW50IG9mIHRoZSBzdWJtaXNzaW9uLgoKSUYgVEhFIFNVQk1JU1NJT04gSVMgQkFTRUQgVVBPTiBXT1JLIFRIQVQgSEFTIEJFRU4gU1BPTlNPUkVEIE9SIFNVUFBPUlRFRApCWSBBTiBBR0VOQ1kgT1IgT1JHQU5JWkFUSU9OIE9USEVSIFRIQU4gVU8sIFlPVSBSRVBSRVNFTlQgVEhBVCBZT1UgSEFWRQpGVUxGSUxMRUQgQU5ZIFJJR0hUIE9GIFJFVklFVyBPUiBPVEhFUiBPQkxJR0FUSU9OUyBSRVFVSVJFRCBCWSBTVUNICkNPTlRSQUNUIE9SIEFHUkVFTUVOVC4KClVPIHdpbGwgY2xlYXJseSBpZGVudGlmeSB5b3VyIG5hbWUocykgYXMgdGhlIGF1dGhvcihzKSBvciBvd25lcihzKSBvZgp0aGUgc3VibWlzc2lvbiwgYW5kIHdpbGwgbm90IG1ha2UgYW55IGFsdGVyYXRpb24sIG90aGVyIHRoYW4gYXMgYWxsb3dlZApieSB0aGlzIGxpY2Vuc2UsIHRvIHlvdXIgc3VibWlzc2lvbi4K
URL
http://scholarsbank.uoregon.edu/xmlui/bitstream/1794/23672/1/Quiroz_Nadja_2018.pdf
File
MD5
4f2bee6df3afb180ef8e0b626483b7ac
27184230
application/pdf
Quiroz_Nadja_2018.pdf
URL
http://scholarsbank.uoregon.edu/xmlui/bitstream/1794/23672/3/Quiroz_Nadja_2018.pdf.txt
File
MD5
4252d56f5e52c455eb868f47e67a6799
169816
text/plain
Quiroz_Nadja_2018.pdf.txt
oai:scholarsbank.uoregon.edu:1794/263462021-06-14T07:23:05Zcom_1794_7553com_1794_7552com_1794_7550col_1794_10476
Scholars' Bank at the Knight Library
author
Woolverton, Aaron
2021-06-13T22:46:44Z
2021-06-13T22:46:44Z
2021-06-13
https://scholarsbank.uoregon.edu/xmlui/handle/1794/26346
As a means of understanding landscape phenomenon, responsive
modeling establishes a place to concurrently hinge between generating
and testing hypotheses while incorporating the expanding agency of
computational modeling and live data streams. Inspired by the ideas
of process discourse and research through design, this project will
investigate the harmful recurrence of algae blooms in South Florida
waterways through the means of responsive modeling. Algae as Agents
aims to define the responsive model as a research method via case study
investigation and analysis; subsequently, responsive modeling practices
and concepts has the potential to be translated from these case studies
into the context of South Florida via projective design methodologies.
The overall goal of the project is to establish an iterative design
approach as the platform to understand the complexities of algae
mitigation while simultaneously providing the researcher a place to test
design outcomes experimentally. Following these design translations is
a reflective meta-analysis revealing both the limitations and knowledge
garnered throughout the design process. This discussion expands the
meaning of the responsive model while providing it more definition within
the realm of landscape architecture research strategies. By projecting
responsive modeling concepts into this context, we have an opportunity
to speculate upon this issue, illuminate algae’s nature through an apolitical
lens, and expand our growing list of research design methodologies.
en_US
Creative Commons BY-NC-ND 4.0-US
Responsive Modeling
Experimental Modeling
Environmental Modeling
Landscape Modeling
Dynamic Modeling
Computational Process
Algae Modeling
Harmful Algae Blooms
Algae Mitigation
South Florida Water Management
Algae as Agents
Terminal Project
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
URL
http://scholarsbank.uoregon.edu/xmlui/bitstream/1794/26346/1/Woolverton_Aaron_2021.pdf
File
MD5
17cf5e0298151f253b0c627f03e5c825
47866498
application/pdf
Woolverton_Aaron_2021.pdf
URL
http://scholarsbank.uoregon.edu/xmlui/bitstream/1794/26346/3/Woolverton_Aaron_2021.pdf.txt
File
MD5
467154acd0ee4a7bed532dd65fe69fe3
320554
text/plain
Woolverton_Aaron_2021.pdf.txt
oai:scholarsbank.uoregon.edu:1794/246452019-06-19T07:32:58Zcom_1794_7553com_1794_7552com_1794_7550col_1794_10476
Scholars' Bank at the Knight Library
author
Murphy, Tori
2019-06-19T00:55:08Z
2019-06-19T00:55:08Z
2019-06-18
https://scholarsbank.uoregon.edu/xmlui/handle/1794/24645
Ecological restoration is a field that is constantly evolving as we learn more
about how much we do not know about our surroundings. This research looks at
the potential to co-create with native animals as a way to provide more suitable
restoration designs at neglected sites. Co-creation, in this case, is where animal
functions contribute to a design that is collaborative, functional and efficient.
This research through design approach to ecological restoration is under explored
in the field of landscape architecture. Literature provides limited guidance about
creating with animal functions like browsing and grazing vegetation. This research
develops an evaluative model for precedent analysis to determine a successful
approach to co-creation, proposes a typology of animal functions in the Pacific
Northwest with potential for co-creation and proposes a design framework that
is tested with a case study in Eugene, OR. After determining the seed dispersal
function was the most appropriate to address the landscape need of a ruderal
meadow, the case study informed a process for phasing prototype perches
beginning with an efficient trial phase. Based on animal feedback the next phase
of prototypes is refined to have more potential for collaboration. These prototypes
must be implemented at the at the right time of year to function for the desired
outcome. The arrangement of the design intervention will encourage an intended
pattern by animal input at the landscape scale. This method will provide cost
effective, suitable and non-human imposed outcomes for neglected sites and an
opportunity for people to care about animals and their needs.
en_US
Creative Commons BY-NC-ND 4.0-US
co-creation
animal
human
collaboration
function
ecological restoration
Inclusive Landscape Design: Co-Creation with Animals
Terminal Project
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
URL
http://scholarsbank.uoregon.edu/xmlui/bitstream/1794/24645/1/Murphy_Tori_2019.pdf
File
MD5
54f09fd843caf2512c83db67a7fd2ef0
34790426
application/pdf
Murphy_Tori_2019.pdf
URL
http://scholarsbank.uoregon.edu/xmlui/bitstream/1794/24645/3/Murphy_Tori_2019.pdf.txt
File
MD5
aa798001f125fae7adaed639e020eae9
120076
text/plain
Murphy_Tori_2019.pdf.txt
oai:scholarsbank.uoregon.edu:1794/243542019-02-14T22:37:49Zcom_1794_7553com_1794_7552com_1794_7550col_1794_10476
Scholars' Bank at the Knight Library
author
Rayle, Derek
2019-02-13T20:27:15Z
2019-02-13T20:27:15Z
2018-06-18
http://hdl.handle.net/1794/24354
This project uses interview responses from local, impacted people to explore the future landscape of the Lithium Pilot Plant in Salar de Uyuni, Bolivia, as its development responds to the rise and fall of global lithium demand. As technology changes, so do the materials that support it. Recent research suggests that lithium could become obsolete in the next fifty years despite current trends towards lithium-ion based technology. Such as shift could leave mass quantities of mining remnants and would constitute the next step in a continuous history of Bolivian resource exploitation. This project explores a speculative future scenario where solutions for the gradual transition from current mining practices constructively deal with mining waste and prepare the study area for a post-mining era. Through this exploration, the project deviates from more standard approaches to mined landscape reclamation, which conceive of returning the landscape to its original state. The overarching premise is that, if a reclamation program framework is established, it could permit the territory to transition to alternative, productive uses. Based on several local interviews and my personal evaluations about the future land use and cover classes, I developed a reclamation program for the study area depicted in a 2070 scenario master plan. The proposal establishes a new economy of infrastructure tourism in the region, using agriculture, energy production and celestial movements in a new form of territorial restructuring.
en
Creative Commons BY-NC-ND 4.0-US
Lithium
Mining
Land use
Lithium Pilot Plant
Mined landscape reclamation
Salar de Uyuni, Bolivia
After Lithium: Reclamation Strategies for Salar de Uyuni, Bolivia
Thesis / Dissertation
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
URL
http://scholarsbank.uoregon.edu/xmlui/bitstream/1794/24354/1/Rayle_Derek_2018.pdf
File
MD5
eacdd061821de717f2693f48e7f23f35
29942796
application/pdf
Rayle_Derek_2018.pdf
URL
http://scholarsbank.uoregon.edu/xmlui/bitstream/1794/24354/3/Rayle_Derek_2018.pdf.txt
File
MD5
7acd7ccd4709063f400f61e0000a3245
134656
text/plain
Rayle_Derek_2018.pdf.txt
oai:scholarsbank.uoregon.edu:1794/285122024-03-06T01:04:50Zcom_1794_7553com_1794_7552com_1794_7550col_1794_10476
Scholars' Bank at the Knight Library
advisor
Ribe, Rob
author
Dorkina, Natalie
2023-07-10T21:05:20Z
2023-07-10T21:05:20Z
2023-06
https://scholarsbank.uoregon.edu/xmlui/handle/1794/28512
Green spaces are an essential part of the urban environment. They should provide multiple benefits, including enhancing people’s well-being and
affording ecological benefits. Rapidly changing economic conditions often lead to significant shortages of maintenance funding and skilled labor
resources (Sutton 2022). This promotes a greatly disturbed urban environment due to neglect and climate change, and a decrease in biodiversity.
The design of green spaces in the urban environment becomes more challenging. It was calculated that currently, potentially one hundred sixty-three
thousand and eight hundred (163,800 km2 (± 35,850 km2) of land are cultivated with turf grasses in the continental United States, which is three
times larger than any irrigated crop (Milesi et al., 2005). “A 2017 projection by the California Air Resources Board cautioned that, beginning in 2020,
the most ubiquitous instruments of landscape care—gasoline-powered landscape maintenance equipment, —could generate more ozone pollution
than all the cars in the state of California combined”(Sutton, 2022).One of the approaches to these challenges that is gaining more attention is to
incorporate into more urban environment ecological planting with low-intensity management (Dunnett and Hitchmough 2004) such as meadow.
My project seeks to design a pollinator meadow near the new site of the Urban Farm Riverfront as an alternative land cover
type to mown amenities to increase the overall productivity of an ecosystem and create space for activities and exploration.
en
Creative Commons BY-NC-ND 4.0-US
ozone pollution
gasoline-powered landscape maintenance equipment
biodiversity
Ecological design of an urban meadow informed by contemporary approaches to lower-intensity management
Terminal Project
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
URL
https://scholarsbank.uoregon.edu/xmlui/bitstream/1794/28512/1/dorinka_2023.pdf
File
MD5
b6b27140828ed8c6fd7944d325f1f4b0
17787004
application/pdf
dorinka_2023.pdf
URL
https://scholarsbank.uoregon.edu/xmlui/bitstream/1794/28512/3/dorinka_2023.pdf.txt
File
MD5
2d1c6f46f6cfd0cfb80d9f8bddc17496
28738
text/plain
dorinka_2023.pdf.txt
oai:scholarsbank.uoregon.edu:1794/261252021-03-25T07:21:51Zcom_1794_7553com_1794_7552com_1794_7550col_1794_10476
Scholars' Bank at the Knight Library
author
Garcia, Victor
2021-03-24T18:59:16Z
2021-03-24T18:59:16Z
2021-03-24
https://scholarsbank.uoregon.edu/xmlui/handle/1794/26125
A review of existing literature finds that minority populations often experience negative health outcomes due to unequal park distribution, quality, and types of available public green spaces. In this study, findings suggest that the Latinx community in Salem, Oregon,
lacks access to natural parks while having greater access to negative cultural services (services that negatively influence health outcomes) in comparison to predominantly White population. This project was broken up into five phases: literature in, GIS analysis, site
identification of potential parks, design, and analysis of the overall project. In the investigation phase, three methods were used: background study (scholarly), GIS (geographic informational analysis) and site study (qualitative site analysis). The identification phase used an analytical approach derived from the qualitative
and quantitative research analysis to make a formal decision on one suitable location. During design, concept generation was guided by precedent analysis, environmental conditions, and community needs. Finally, after project research, identification, and design,
this study analyzes its process of investigation as a process for further research and implementation. This research provides insight into what the planning and design process may look like to make future informed decisions for more accessible and equitable city parks for underrepresented communities.
en_US
Creative Commons BY-NC-ND 4.0-US
Latinx
equity
pocket parks
urban green space
urban design
park use
cultural services
natural space
revitalization
Park Accessibility and Equity: Research and Design in Salem, Oregon
Terminal Project
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
URL
http://scholarsbank.uoregon.edu/xmlui/bitstream/1794/26125/1/Garcia_Victor_2020.pdf
File
MD5
8e260d48fa569aa52c09f4cb9bc90098
52274224
application/pdf
Garcia_Victor_2020.pdf
URL
http://scholarsbank.uoregon.edu/xmlui/bitstream/1794/26125/3/Garcia_Victor_2020.pdf.txt
File
MD5
b5ecd913d4da262512ddf97196a79638
157219
text/plain
Garcia_Victor_2020.pdf.txt
oai:scholarsbank.uoregon.edu:1794/263432021-06-14T07:22:53Zcom_1794_7553com_1794_7552com_1794_7550col_1794_10476
Scholars' Bank at the Knight Library
author
Ketterer, Hana
2021-06-13T22:13:13Z
2021-06-13T22:13:13Z
2021-06-13
https://scholarsbank.uoregon.edu/xmlui/handle/1794/26343
This project develops design strategies for landscape architects, planners, city
officials, and public space designers that improve the provision of public space
resources. Productive public landscapes that combine ecosystem services
with inclusive community resources have potential to create more socially and
ecologically resilient cities. Landscape architects have a major role in shaping
how public spaces integrate these networks. Currently, there are 135 public parks
in Eugene, Oregon. Yet they are used primarily for recreational purposes. With so
many people facing precarity, I propose that a reassessment of what public space
can provide for human and non-human users of a city. The design strategies I
propose include 1) building urban food forests as novel ecosystems, 2) re-imagining
urban waterways as a social and ecological artery, and 3) developing a cadence of
amenities. As a speculative design project, I applied these design strategies through
four facets of coexistence in public space: 1) spatial design and environment, 2)
operations and maintenance, 3) program and activation, and 4) rights, rules, and
accountability (Huttenhoff 2021). Using these design strategies, I developed a
network of productive urban public spaces along Amazon Creek in Eugene, Oregon.
Each space exemplifies a program of learning, harvesting, or sharing. Reframing
Amazon Creek as a social and ecological artery of the city allows for human and
non-human users to gain tangible resources such as food or habitat to support social
infrastructure and ecological function. The strategies are intended to be transferable
to projects and sites in a variety of locations that re-establish the potential of urban
public space.
en_US
Creative Commons BY-NC-ND 4.0-US
urban ecology
connecting
Eugene, Oregon
Amazon Creek, Eugene, Oregon
inclusion
public space
park
food forest
amenity
waterway
From Dividing to Connecting: The meshing of ecological functions and inclusive resources in public space design
Terminal Project
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
URL
http://scholarsbank.uoregon.edu/xmlui/bitstream/1794/26343/1/Ketterer_Hana_2021.pdf
File
MD5
1726391ee821674d6469451e44972683
56777980
application/pdf
Ketterer_Hana_2021.pdf
URL
http://scholarsbank.uoregon.edu/xmlui/bitstream/1794/26343/3/Ketterer_Hana_2021.pdf.txt
File
MD5
d9b6dbe7fa573545459d34f19ab28954
145797
text/plain
Ketterer_Hana_2021.pdf.txt
oai:scholarsbank.uoregon.edu:1794/285172023-07-31T23:22:12Zcom_1794_7553com_1794_7552com_1794_7550col_1794_10476
Scholars' Bank at the Knight Library
advisor
Geffel, Michael
author
Hensey, Celia
2023-07-10T21:18:12Z
2023-07-10T21:18:12Z
2023-06
https://scholarsbank.uoregon.edu/xmlui/handle/1794/28517
Genius loci and terroir are concepts that both relate to how the relationship between people and place is experienced through a personal sensory experience. Viticultural landscapes are working landscapes that also provide aesthetic, emotional, and sensory value – and the connections between wine and place are a critical component of winemaking culture. Idiot’s Grace winery, a small organic winery in Mosier, OR, provides an opportunity to explore how genius loci and terroir intersect through design. Using case study analysis, the project will compare the form, space, function, and concept of relevant projects to create design guidelines. Following this process, the guidelines will be tested through experimental design and simulation.
en
Creative Commons BY-NC-ND 4.0-US
landscape architecture
winery
terroir
genius loci
Tasting Landscape: Expressing sense of place through Idiot's Grace
Thesis / Dissertation
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
URL
https://scholarsbank.uoregon.edu/xmlui/bitstream/1794/28517/1/hensey_2023.pdf
File
MD5
9e67f2d98d65ebf8bd4e031f16ce7ae0
11335710
application/pdf
hensey_2023.pdf
URL
https://scholarsbank.uoregon.edu/xmlui/bitstream/1794/28517/3/hensey_2023.pdf.txt
File
MD5
b2eecb31b0d447fc04bbb17716e0ca6c
60712
text/plain
hensey_2023.pdf.txt
oai:scholarsbank.uoregon.edu:1794/236682018-08-28T17:08:50Zcom_1794_7553com_1794_7552com_1794_7550col_1794_10476
Scholars' Bank at the Knight Library
author
Holt, Whitney
2018-08-25T23:26:22Z
2018-08-25T23:26:22Z
2018-08-25
http://hdl.handle.net/1794/23668
As communities and demographics shift rapidly in the United States,
landscape architects are responsible for creating and curating progressively
more urban spaces for increasingly diverse communities. In an era of
extreme nationalism and xenophobia designers are confronted with a
moral and ethical duty to design spaces that recognize diverse needs and
actively foster inclusion. This project explores the capacity of collaborative
art-making, a tool from arts education, to engage community and solicit
individual’s values and priorities as part of the landscape architecture design
process.
Currently, there is a dearth of documented methods/strategies for
facilitating public engagement ascribed to landscape architecture (LA). LA
primarily borrows public engagement methods from Public Planning and
many of these strategies elicit specific, concrete desires/wishes, rather than
more comprehensive values. Furthermore, these methods don’t consistently
address how to engage diverse communities and groups of people and/or
how to facilitate activities that foster empathy. Meanwhile, recent studies in
arts education maintain that collaborative art-making fosters relationships,
strengthens community, reduces marginalization, and promotes inclusion
(Hajisoteriou and Agelides 2016). Consequently, this project asks; What
are roles for collaborative art making, as a tool for community engagement
and inclusion, in the landscape architecture design process of urban public
spaces?
This project employs two collaborative art-making projects to
explore individuals’ perceptions and values regarding the Pioneer and
Pioneer Mother, two culturally and historically significant statues situated on
the University of Oregon campus. I asked participants for specific feedback
pertaining to facilitation, process, and outcomes of the art-making projects in
order to further realize the potential values and deficits of collaborative artmaking
as a tool for public engagement in landscape architecture practice.
Creative Commons BY-NC-ND 4.0-US
Collaborative art
Landscape architecture
Process
Site analysis
Public engagement
Collaborative collage
Designing for diverse users
Community engagement
Collaborative Art Making: A New Method for Landscape Architecture
Terminal Project
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
URL
http://scholarsbank.uoregon.edu/xmlui/bitstream/1794/23668/1/Holt_Whitney_2018.pdf
File
MD5
cb2a55398c25aa15235250a1e00fe72d
3522207
application/pdf
Holt_Whitney_2018.pdf
URL
http://scholarsbank.uoregon.edu/xmlui/bitstream/1794/23668/3/Holt_Whitney_2018.pdf.txt
File
MD5
8e9fd4c98fe97e6ab566d0bd8edc1291
113057
text/plain
Holt_Whitney_2018.pdf.txt
oai:scholarsbank.uoregon.edu:1794/225012017-07-10T08:04:09Zcom_1794_7553com_1794_7552com_1794_7550col_1794_10476
Scholars' Bank at the Knight Library
author
Cronan, Daniel
2017-07-10T02:03:22Z
2017-07-10T02:03:22Z
2017-07-09
http://hdl.handle.net/1794/22501
PURPOSE: Evaluating a student’s development is key to understanding whether and
how they are learning. This project focuses on landscape architecture and planning
education, using a set curriculum, courses, and workshops as vehicles for experimentation. It
systematically evaluates student learning within a studio course and a workshop by analyzing
self-reported and spatially explicit evidence of learning about stormwater infiltration system
design.
METHOD: The method gathers, assesses, and evaluates evidence of student learning. It
uses measurement and mapping combined with student surveys to evaluate two forms of
evidence: self-reported and spatially explicit. Self-reported evidence are responses to a
questionnaire administered both before and after course instruction to determine which key
factors of students’ stormwater designs improved. The spatially explicit evidence is student
designs for stormwater related interventions in landscape form and pattern, again both early
in the sequence and after instruction. The spatially explicit evidence for both the studio
and workshop were evaluated using a spatial analysis tool, “SUSTAIN” (an ArcGIS plugin),
which uses siting criteria specified by the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) that
distinguish places suitable for stormwater infiltration facilities.
RESULTS: The results of this study present and interpret the evaluation of self-reported
and spatially explicit evidence of learning. The results indicate that students from the
workshop showed evidence of learning from a spatially explicit evidence evaluation, however
comparisons of the self-reported evidence from initial to final were mixed. These results are
intended to provide recommendations for future courses regarding siting stormwater facilities
at the landscape scale.
CONCLUSION: I conclude that both spatially explicit and self-reported evidence together
best indicate learning for design and planning students, with the evidence in this project most
compelling regarding short-course workshop format classes.
en_US
Creative Commons BY-NC-ND 4.0-US
Stormwater Education: Evaluating learning when siting stormwater facilities at the landscape scale
Terminal Project
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
URL
http://scholarsbank.uoregon.edu/xmlui/bitstream/1794/22501/1/Cronan_Daniel_2017.pdf
File
MD5
2197ff98d81a2bf9c8a9bb4c0612c9a4
22760224
application/pdf
Cronan_Daniel_2017.pdf
URL
http://scholarsbank.uoregon.edu/xmlui/bitstream/1794/22501/3/Cronan_Daniel_2017.pdf.txt
File
MD5
efff190c000309e12a2b1eb5e68c7ddf
91662
text/plain
Cronan_Daniel_2017.pdf.txt
oai:scholarsbank.uoregon.edu:1794/261282021-03-25T07:22:07Zcom_1794_7553com_1794_7552com_1794_7550col_1794_10476
Scholars' Bank at the Knight Library
author
Tamang, Tshewang
2021-03-24T19:12:34Z
2021-03-24T19:12:34Z
2021-03-24
https://scholarsbank.uoregon.edu/xmlui/handle/1794/26128
As a result of decades of rapid unplanned growth, urbanization in the Kathmandu Valley has been unsustainable and haphazard. Today, Kathmandu's food systems in particular are increasingly subject to the effects of a diminishing foodshed and loss of its historical agricultural identity, compounded by stressors such as natural disasters and climate
change.
Urban agriculture could be a linchpin, not only supplementing local food requirements,but
providing key ecosystem services, supporting social and infrastructural resilience, and fostering self- determination for communities historically marginalized by the state. However, for urban agriculture to achieve this potential, it needs to be embedded into the spatial, cultural, and ecological systems of the built environment. Through Research
by Designing, this project explores this question and asks how this integration of urban agriculture could be achieved . To answer this, the project focuses on the concepts of urban agriculture, green infrastructure , and agroecology. Thinking of urban agriculture as green infrastructure provides a framework for incorporating food production as one of the multiple benefits we derive from the land. Thinking of urban agriculture as urban agroecology provides a framework for incorporating practices rooted in landscape ecology and food sovereignty. Together these three concepts intersect to form productive green infrastructure. This productive green infrastructure takes the form of a system
that this project proposes as the Hariyo Mala, a projective vision for future Kathmandu Valley. Nested within this are additional design proposals at the city, neighborhood and site scales that further explore strategies and elements of the Hariyo Mala system. Together , they project an alternative vision for Kathmandu , one where urban agriculture is
integrated as essential infrastructure in creating a more resilient urban future for the valley.
en_US
Creative Commons BY-NC-ND 4.0-US
Kathmandu
Nepal
Landscape architecture
Urban agriculture
Agroecology
Green infrastructure
Productive Green Infrastructure
Agroforestry
Hariyo Mala: Integrating agriculture as essential infrastructure in Kathmandu
Terminal Project
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
URL
http://scholarsbank.uoregon.edu/xmlui/bitstream/1794/26128/1/Tamang_Tshewang_2020.pdf
File
MD5
22d06a703763621267935068afc4bf16
31703094
application/pdf
Tamang_Tshewang_2020.pdf
URL
http://scholarsbank.uoregon.edu/xmlui/bitstream/1794/26128/3/Tamang_Tshewang_2020.pdf.txt
File
MD5
076b21e649f3da4af45260d35cbbe095
134248
text/plain
Tamang_Tshewang_2020.pdf.txt
oai:scholarsbank.uoregon.edu:1794/236762018-08-26T07:30:26Zcom_1794_7553com_1794_7552com_1794_7550col_1794_10476
Scholars' Bank at the Knight Library
author
Willeke, Jamie
2018-08-26T00:03:49Z
2018-08-26T00:03:49Z
2018-08-25
http://hdl.handle.net/1794/23676
Physical activity is a main component of preventing and
controlling chronic diseases associated with sedentary
lifestyles. When built environments are developed to prioritize
vehicle transportation, coupled with increased mechanization
of everyday activities, sedentary lifestyles and associated
chronic diseases become more prevalent. This project builds
a case for the implementation of linear parks as a prescriptive
element to provide increased active recreation opportunities
in small communities that are affected by inactivity-related
chronic diseases. Small communities are affected by this issue,
but can be limited in funding and planning resources.
This project defines linear parks and provides a linear park
typology accompanied by conceptual park designs for
adaptation into other communities. A two-part linear park siting
method, consisting of a GIS-based landscape search analysis
and small-scale suitability analysis, is outlined and applied
to the small community of Roseburg, Oregon as an example
study area on which to test the method and applicability of
linear park types. The results of the method are mapped and
discussed to provide guidance to future small communities that
want to increase active recreation opportunities.
en_US
Creative Commons BY-NC-ND 4.0-US
linear parks
small communities
inactivity-related chronic diseases
active recreation
linear park network
linear park typology
linear park definition
A path more traveled: A case for increased active recreation opportunities in Oregon’s small communities
Terminal Project
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
URL
http://scholarsbank.uoregon.edu/xmlui/bitstream/1794/23676/1/Willeke_Jamie_2018.pdf
File
MD5
0e4f881336add66b9cc0ba56080354d9
29173404
application/pdf
Willeke_Jamie_2018.pdf
URL
http://scholarsbank.uoregon.edu/xmlui/bitstream/1794/23676/3/Willeke_Jamie_2018.pdf.txt
File
MD5
3ee932be56c36109cbd764396c3a72ab
173110
text/plain
Willeke_Jamie_2018.pdf.txt
oai:scholarsbank.uoregon.edu:1794/225022017-07-10T08:03:51Zcom_1794_7553com_1794_7552com_1794_7550col_1794_10476
Scholars' Bank at the Knight Library
author
Davis, Bryn
2017-07-10T02:12:44Z
2017-07-10T02:12:44Z
2017-07-09
http://hdl.handle.net/1794/22502
The Problem- The threat of a Cascadia Subduction Zone (CSZ) earthquake
and tsunami on the Oregon Coast has prompted coastal communities
to update and re-evaluate disaster resilience management plans. Most
plans are based on a preparation-and-response model, which addresses
the disaster immediately before, during, and after. The issue with these
strategies is that they do not aim to have a deeper impact on human
behavior, they play to a “business-as-usual” lifestyle. An approach that
weaves together the immediate needs of a community at the time of
disaster with the long-term goal of improving the resilience of the coastal
community can contribute to the long-term creation of safer and more
secure communities1. The purpose of this project is to identify how tsunami
evacuation routes can contribute to the resilience of a coastal community.
Methodology- The meta-framework of resilience proposed by Aldunce et
al.2; in combination with literature reviews of government and peer reviewed
articles and interviews with regional experts, contributed to defining
resilience in operational terms and to identifying elements of tsunami
evacuation routes and community resilience strategies.
Findings - The design response for improving the resilience of Neskowin,
Oregon was created through the synthesis of the community resilience
strategies and elements of tsunami evacuation routes. The tsunami
evacuation route elements were chosen based on what could be addressed
in Neskowin, what could be affordable for that community, and what
contributions they would make to resilience.
en_US
Creative Commons BY-NC-ND 4.0-US
Woven Into the Community: Resilience and Tsunami Evacuation Route Configuration in Neskowin, Oregon
Terminal Project
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
URL
http://scholarsbank.uoregon.edu/xmlui/bitstream/1794/22502/1/Davis_Bryn_2017.pdf
File
MD5
f010117fb87cfe8b75f15841df7c1fad
68818066
application/pdf
Davis_Bryn_2017.pdf
URL
http://scholarsbank.uoregon.edu/xmlui/bitstream/1794/22502/3/Davis_Bryn_2017.pdf.txt
File
MD5
12d7bacd3211ed7857ed00ded6be9b6c
151896
text/plain
Davis_Bryn_2017.pdf.txt
oai:scholarsbank.uoregon.edu:1794/263482021-06-14T07:22:21Zcom_1794_7553com_1794_7552com_1794_7550col_1794_10476
Scholars' Bank at the Knight Library
author
Kuebler, Jeffrey
2021-06-13T22:57:37Z
2021-06-13T22:57:37Z
2021-06-13
https://scholarsbank.uoregon.edu/xmlui/handle/1794/26348
The Columbia River Gorge separates Oregon and Washington along a 75 mile stretch of poignant beauty
became a drivable destination in the 1920’s [Willis]. There are key view areas on this route of elevated
aesthetic quality. The conservation of intact scenic landscape beauty from these key view areas is informed by
strata of local and regional land use policy, as well as conservation trust land banking.
The Gorge Commission, given its duties through the Columbia River Gorge National Scenic Area Act in 1986,
enforces the landscape conservation policies [gorgecommission]. A brief history of the legal framework and
controversy of the Act is offered.
This project looks into identifying land use policy mechanisms in place for preservation of scenic beauty, across
public and private properties visible from three exceptional viewpoints in the Columbia River Gorge that
represent some of the most scenic and most visited scenic points. Scenic quality in the Gorge is generally
preserved through limiting housing development, with the assumption that unnatural objects in scenery detract
from scenic beauty.
Representation of spatial data is projected on viewshed scale, and differentiated at a tax parcel basis. Data was
extracted from publicly available GIS sources, and projected onto map views and panoramic scenes. Site
photography of the represented key view areas is joined for better visual comparison between what is seen and
visual stewardship policies.
This project is a visual document intended to represent of some of the most visited and publicly valued places in
the Gorge. This document is intended for a general audience to better understand why the landscape looks the
way it does in the Columbia River Gorge. Through offering a better understanding of how policy shapes the
landscape we see in the Gorge, more informed public discussions about the Gorge’s visual future can be held.
The document and visuals are also intended to be a platform from which further modeling and public preference
surveys, including alternative visual future scenarios, may be developed for Commission and community
review.
en_US
Creative Commons BY-NC-ND 4.0-US
Columbia Gorge
Visual Policy Impact
Scenic Beauty
Land Use policy
GIS
Columbia River Gorge National Scenic Area: Visual Policy Impact Study
Terminal Project
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
URL
http://scholarsbank.uoregon.edu/xmlui/bitstream/1794/26348/1/Kuebler_Jeffrey_2021.pdf
File
MD5
f06abd1899cad9c1edb7badf49f99146
5889771
application/pdf
Kuebler_Jeffrey_2021.pdf
URL
http://scholarsbank.uoregon.edu/xmlui/bitstream/1794/26348/3/Kuebler_Jeffrey_2021.pdf.txt
File
MD5
95f77f33913326d5a5279f03b76df73d
98317
text/plain
Kuebler_Jeffrey_2021.pdf.txt
oai:scholarsbank.uoregon.edu:1794/236752018-08-28T17:19:10Zcom_1794_7553com_1794_7552com_1794_7550col_1794_10476
Scholars' Bank at the Knight Library
author
Stone, Jill
2018-08-25T23:59:24Z
2018-08-25T23:59:24Z
2018-08-25
http://hdl.handle.net/1794/23675
Federal-tribal collaborations in resource
management are becoming more common,
but successes are difficult to duplicate and
recommendations for future partnerships are
often vague, nontransferable, or dependent
on a specific tribe, federal agency, or context.
Since no two partnerships are alike, I ask how
and why two projects within the same ranger
district, with relations to the same tribes and
harboring similar goals, have evolved and
been implemented in different ways. Both
Camas Prairie and Cougar Rock, two resource
management projects within the Sweet Home
Ranger District of the Willamette National
Forest in Oregon, aim to improve access to and
abundance of American Indian first foods. As
a means to compare the two sites, this project
uses a literature review to generate seven
‘guiding principles of a successful federal-tribal
collaboration.’ The principles are then employed
through a case study analysis, using in depth
interviews and document analysis, in order to
1) Better understand the differences between
two projects involving similar tribal interests
2) Explain how a specific landscape context
adds to current understanding of federal-tribal
relations and 3) Make recommendations to land
managers on ways to better identify promising
collaborations.
en_US
Creative Commons BY-NC-ND 4.0-US
Tribal interests
Cultural resources
Oregon American Indians
Cultural Resource Relations: An Exploration of Tribal Interests Within the Sweet Home Ranger District
Terminal Project
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
URL
http://scholarsbank.uoregon.edu/xmlui/bitstream/1794/23675/1/Stone_Jill_2018.pdf
File
MD5
735a8ef154af91856953d7dd9293ea35
16941983
application/pdf
Stone_Jill_2018.pdf
URL
http://scholarsbank.uoregon.edu/xmlui/bitstream/1794/23675/3/Stone_Jill_2018.pdf.txt
File
MD5
3a1caeae8a2c181c2fb4c3dcae92611a
127248
text/plain
Stone_Jill_2018.pdf.txt
oai:scholarsbank.uoregon.edu:1794/263402021-06-14T07:22:11Zcom_1794_7553com_1794_7552com_1794_7550col_1794_10476
Scholars' Bank at the Knight Library
author
Koonce, Elizabeth
2021-06-13T21:39:13Z
2021-06-13T21:39:13Z
2021-06-13
https://scholarsbank.uoregon.edu/xmlui/handle/1794/26340
The United States currently faces a range crisis on it’s public lands.
Federally protected mustangs (Equus caballus) share a degraded
range with millions of grazing livestock. Mustangs’ contentious status
as an alleged invasive species is at odds with their protective status.
Not managed as wildlife yet not classified as livestock, mustangs are
removed from the range in the thousands only to live out their lives in
costly government holding facilities which eat up most of the Bureau
of Land Management’s wild horse and burro budget. The BLM faces
heavy opposition to mustangs from ranchers and political lobbyists.
The entire public rangeland situation is a tangled web of public outcry,
bureaucratic mismanagement, and dueling interests.
This project seeks to untangle the issues within the rangeland crisis
through a “Land Management Design” approach. It presents a
thorough background in the natural, cultural, and ecological history
of the wild horse in North America, and focuses on the current
management approaches utilized in the United States. Through
the lens of several precedent studies, a strategic management
framework is proposed. This framework is then applied to three Herd
Management Areas (HMAs) in the state of Oregon. These three case
studies are explored in depth and drone photography and mapping
show the current status of these sites. Photoshop renderings present
alternatives for how the sites could evolve when the proposed strategic
management framework is applied.
It is possible for all parties with stake in the rangeland crisis to benefit
from a land management design approach. The conclusion of the
project discusses this at length, and further delves into the sociopolitical
changes that must take place for our public lands and our
wild horses to be saved.
en_US
Creative Commons BY-NC-ND 4.0-US
Horses
Mustangs
Rangelands
Wild horses
Range management
Public lands
The Grass Remembers the Horses: A land management design approach to incorporating free-roaming American mustangs (Equus caballus) on Western rangelands
Terminal Project
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
URL
http://scholarsbank.uoregon.edu/xmlui/bitstream/1794/26340/1/Koonce_Elizabeth.pdf
File
MD5
efbbb62877c4e52db7e0ac3d7c861f2c
76062403
application/pdf
Koonce_Elizabeth.pdf
URL
http://scholarsbank.uoregon.edu/xmlui/bitstream/1794/26340/3/Koonce_Elizabeth.pdf.txt
File
MD5
819fd6cc188aa45b964607c27b15162e
91012
text/plain
Koonce_Elizabeth.pdf.txt
oai:scholarsbank.uoregon.edu:1794/201312019-08-08T20:30:27Zcom_1794_7553com_1794_7552com_1794_7550col_1794_10476
Scholars' Bank at the Knight Library
author
Pierce, Nancy
2016-09-15T20:14:24Z
2016-09-15T20:14:24Z
2016
http://hdl.handle.net/1794/20131
Brownfields are most often located adjacent to disadvantaged communities. While toxicity
is a primary concern surrounding brownfields there has been very little study on the social
impact of these parks. This Master’s Project adds to the specialized body of brownfield
literature within the field of Landscape Architecture by aiding stakeholders in understanding
the risks, benefits and effects of urban brownfield parks on surrounding neighborhoods,
through the lens of environmental justice, using case study analysis and post-occupancy
evaluations.
The goal for this project is to create a framework by which to evaluate the environmental
justice of existing and future brownfield parks. Literature review of Brownfields, Environmental
Justice and Urban Redevelopment propose three categories of evaluative criteria: Financial,
Health and Quality of Life. Using the case study sites of Gas Works and Warren G Magnuson
Parks, in Seattle, WA, five tractable metrics are defined as proxies for the many metrics
identified for those criteria. Using this evaluative method, stakeholders can identify park
impacts on the local community and whether environmental justice has been achieved
through brownfield remediation.
The outcome of this project is an evaluative tool for gauging the environmental justice
achieved by neighborhoods affected by brownfield parks. Due to data constraints
stemming from the time frame chosen for this project (1970-2010), the inquiry was limited in
its application for the selected case studies. Many of the study metrics were unavaiable for
decades prior to 2000. Other brownfield park neighborhoods, with alternate viable metrics,
could show different results using the evaluative method proposed here.
The two case study sites in Seattle reveal brownfield parks provide mixed benefits.
Neighborhood financial and health metrics reveal positive (decreased unemployment),
negative (increased vacancy rates, decreased age diversity) and ambiguous (consistent
poverty) impacts while quality of life metric results are contradictory (vegetative cover).
This Master’s Project reveals that while urban brownfield parks improve some metrics of
environmental justice, they are not always beneficial for surrounding residents and at times
represent an environmental injustice.
en_US
Creative Commons BY-NC-ND 4.0-US
Brownfield Park Neighborhood
Case study
Environmental justice
Gas Works Park
Landscape architecture
Pacific Northwest
Post-occupancy evaluation
Remediation
Residential neighborhood
Seattle (Wa.)
Urban park
Urban renewal
Warren G. Magnuson Park
Seeking Equity in Industrial Wastelands: Evaluating Environmental Justice in Residential Neighborhoods
Terminal Project
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
URL
http://scholarsbank.uoregon.edu/xmlui/bitstream/1794/20131/1/Pierce_Nancy_2016.pdf
File
MD5
848fa19c97d0f543fc4f4ab173269236
49961648
application/pdf
Pierce_Nancy_2016.pdf
URL
http://scholarsbank.uoregon.edu/xmlui/bitstream/1794/20131/3/Pierce_Nancy_2016.pdf.txt
File
MD5
af1404b38ca5f352329d7add0aa49516
284478
text/plain
Pierce_Nancy_2016.pdf.txt
oai:scholarsbank.uoregon.edu:1794/236732018-08-28T17:12:19Zcom_1794_7553com_1794_7552com_1794_7550col_1794_10476
Scholars' Bank at the Knight Library
author
Reyna, Katya
2018-08-25T23:51:55Z
2018-08-25T23:51:55Z
2018-08-25
http://hdl.handle.net/1794/23673
Memories of displacement, loss, and discrimination are oten present in designed sites. A decline in
memory and story sharing has let these memories lingering on sites, open wounds waiting to be unearthed,
discussed, and healed. These memories are hidden windows to the cultural identity or spirit of
a place, experienced individually and collectively through generations.
This project proposes a new mode of site analysis that recognizes memories of displacement and racial
tension as necessary aspects of understanding the agency of design within community context. This
method challenges current standards in landscape architecture practice by suggesting that we look
beyond the physicality of a site and delve deeper into buried experiences through community and interdisciplinary
partnerships to create more inclusive, honest and just places.
Using Mindy Fullilove’s analysis of root shock and Pierre Nora’s concept of sites of memory as frameworks,
a case study was conducted, examining how projects have implemented memory and story
collection strategies. The case study informed a proposal for a site analysis memory mapping method,
which was piloted at three community gatherings in the Chicago neighborhoods of Pilsen and Little Village.
Both are Mexican immigrant neighborhoods facing rapid gentrification and fragmentation. A current
proposal for a multi-modal trail would connect both neighborhoods. As a first step in community
engagement and design, residents of the two neighborhoods were asked to map their memories - good
and bad - and describe any other sentiments about their community. These were then aggregated into
an analysis map depicting the untold narratives and collective memories of Pilsen and Little Village. The
analysis informed where and how healing strategies could be implemented.
Site analysis and design can reveal histories – even dificult ones- and engage in healing, rather than be
complicit in the denial and erasure of people’s experiences. Strategies like memory mapping, interviewing,
and archival research can move landscape architects beyond traditional site analysis and help
foster community responsive design that nurtures connections with those who have been historically
disenfranchised.
Creative Commons BY-NC-ND 4.0-US
Memories as Catalysts for Social Change
Terminal Project
Tk9URTogUExBQ0UgWU9VUiBPV04gTElDRU5TRSBIRVJFClRoaXMgc2FtcGxlIGxpY2Vuc2UgaXMgcHJvdmlkZWQgZm9yIGluZm9ybWF0aW9uYWwgcHVycG9zZXMgb25seS4KCk5PTi1FWENMVVNJVkUgRElTVFJJQlVUSU9OIExJQ0VOU0UKCkJ5IHNpZ25pbmcgYW5kIHN1Ym1pdHRpbmcgdGhpcyBsaWNlbnNlLCB5b3UgKHRoZSBhdXRob3Iocykgb3IgY29weXJpZ2h0Cm93bmVyKSBncmFudHMgdG8gdGhlIFVuaXZlcnNpdHkgb2YgT3JlZ29uIChVTykgdGhlIG5vbi1leGNsdXNpdmUgcmlnaHQgdG8KcmVwcm9kdWNlLCBjb252ZXJ0IChhcyBkZWZpbmVkIGJlbG93KSwgYW5kL29yIGRpc3RyaWJ1dGUgeW91ciBzdWJtaXNzaW9uCihpbmNsdWRpbmcgdGhlIGFic3RyYWN0KSB3b3JsZHdpZGUgaW4gcHJpbnQgYW5kIGVsZWN0cm9uaWMgZm9ybWF0IGFuZAppbiBhbnkgbWVkaXVtLCBpbmNsdWRpbmcgYnV0IG5vdCBsaW1pdGVkIHRvIGF1ZGlvIG9yIHZpZGVvLgoKWW91IGFncmVlIHRoYXQgVU8gbWF5LCB3aXRob3V0IGNoYW5naW5nIHRoZSBjb250ZW50LCBjb252ZXJ0IHRoZQpzdWJtaXNzaW9uIHRvIGFueSBtZWRpdW0gb3IgZm9ybWF0IGZvciB0aGUgcHVycG9zZSBvZiBwcmVzZXJ2YXRpb24uCgpZb3UgYWxzbyBhZ3JlZSB0aGF0IHRoZSBVTyBMaWJyYXJpZXMgbWF5IGtlZXAgbW9yZSB0aGFuIG9uZSBjb3B5IG9mCnRoaXMgc3VibWlzc2lvbiBmb3IgcHVycG9zZXMgb2Ygc2VjdXJpdHksIGJhY2stdXAgYW5kIHByZXNlcnZhdGlvbi4KVGhlIExpYnJhcmllcyB3aWxsIG1ha2UgYSBnb29kIGZhaXRoIGVmZm9ydCB0byBwcmVzZXJ2ZSBhbmQgZGlzdHJpYnV0ZQp0aGlzIHN1Ym1pc3Npb24uICBJbiB0aGUgZXZlbnQgdGhhdCB0aGUgTGlicmFyaWVzIGFyZSB1bmFibGUgdG8gY29udGludWUKdG8gbWFpbnRhaW4gdGhpcyBzdWJtaXNzaW9uIGFzIHBhcnQgb2YgdGhlIGluc3RpdHV0aW9uYWwgcmVwb3NpdG9yeSwKdGhlIExpYnJhcmllcyByZXNlcnZlIHRoZSByaWdodCB0byByZXR1cm4gdGhlIGNvbnRlbnQgdG8gdGhlIHN1Ym1pdHRpbmcKZGVwYXJ0bWVudHMvdW5pdHMvaW5kaXZpZHVhbHMuIElmIHRoZSBlbnRpdHkgaXMgbm8gbG9uZ2VyIGluIGV4aXN0ZW5jZSwKb3IgaWYgdGhlIGluZGl2aWR1YWwgaXMgdW50cmFjZWFibGUsIHRoZSBMaWJyYXJpZXMgd2lsbCBhcnJhbmdlIHRvIGhhdmUKdGhlIG1hdGVyaWFscyBhcHByYWlzZWQgYW5kIHBvc3NpYmx5IGFyY2hpdmVkIGFzIHBhcnQgb2YgdGhlIHVuaXZlcnNpdHkncwpkaWdpdGFsIGFyY2hpdmVzLgoKWW91IHJlcHJlc2VudCB0aGF0IHRoZSBzdWJtaXNzaW9uIGlzIHlvdXIgb3JpZ2luYWwgd29yaywgYW5kIHRoYXQgeW91CmhhdmUgdGhlIHJpZ2h0IHRvIGdyYW50IHRoZSByaWdodHMgY29udGFpbmVkIGluIHRoaXMgbGljZW5zZS4gWW91IGFsc28KcmVwcmVzZW50IHRoYXQgeW91ciBzdWJtaXNzaW9uIGRvZXMgbm90LCB0byB0aGUgYmVzdCBvZiB5b3VyIGtub3dsZWRnZSwKaW5mcmluZ2UgdXBvbiBhbnlvbmUncyBjb3B5cmlnaHQuCgpJZiB0aGUgc3VibWlzc2lvbiBjb250YWlucyBtYXRlcmlhbCBmb3Igd2hpY2ggeW91IGRvIG5vdCBob2xkIGNvcHlyaWdodCwKeW91IHJlcHJlc2VudCB0aGF0IHlvdSBoYXZlIG9idGFpbmVkIGFueSBuZWNlc3NhcnkgcGVybWlzc2lvbiBmcm9tIHRoZQpjb3B5cmlnaHQgb3duZXIgdG8gZ3JhbnQgVU8gdGhlIHJpZ2h0cyByZXF1aXJlZCBieSB0aGlzIGxpY2Vuc2UsIGFuZCAKdGhhdCBzdWNoIHRoaXJkLXBhcnR5IG93bmVkIG1hdGVyaWFsIGlzIGNsZWFybHkgaWRlbnRpZmllZCBhbmQKYWNrbm93bGVkZ2VkIHdpdGhpbiB0aGUgdGV4dCBvciBjb250ZW50IG9mIHRoZSBzdWJtaXNzaW9uLgoKSUYgVEhFIFNVQk1JU1NJT04gSVMgQkFTRUQgVVBPTiBXT1JLIFRIQVQgSEFTIEJFRU4gU1BPTlNPUkVEIE9SIFNVUFBPUlRFRApCWSBBTiBBR0VOQ1kgT1IgT1JHQU5JWkFUSU9OIE9USEVSIFRIQU4gVU8sIFlPVSBSRVBSRVNFTlQgVEhBVCBZT1UgSEFWRQpGVUxGSUxMRUQgQU5ZIFJJR0hUIE9GIFJFVklFVyBPUiBPVEhFUiBPQkxJR0FUSU9OUyBSRVFVSVJFRCBCWSBTVUNICkNPTlRSQUNUIE9SIEFHUkVFTUVOVC4KClVPIHdpbGwgY2xlYXJseSBpZGVudGlmeSB5b3VyIG5hbWUocykgYXMgdGhlIGF1dGhvcihzKSBvciBvd25lcihzKSBvZgp0aGUgc3VibWlzc2lvbiwgYW5kIHdpbGwgbm90IG1ha2UgYW55IGFsdGVyYXRpb24sIG90aGVyIHRoYW4gYXMgYWxsb3dlZApieSB0aGlzIGxpY2Vuc2UsIHRvIHlvdXIgc3VibWlzc2lvbi4K
URL
http://scholarsbank.uoregon.edu/xmlui/bitstream/1794/23673/1/Reyna_Katya_2018.pdf
File
MD5
57ae12491b15474ac2f9026656a97014
20385696
application/pdf
Reyna_Katya_2018.pdf
URL
http://scholarsbank.uoregon.edu/xmlui/bitstream/1794/23673/3/Reyna_Katya_2018.pdf.txt
File
MD5
4cd96a3338c98d956599f6c2091f14b2
144063
text/plain
Reyna_Katya_2018.pdf.txt
oai:scholarsbank.uoregon.edu:1794/246422019-08-08T21:53:20Zcom_1794_7553com_1794_7552com_1794_7550col_1794_10476
Scholars' Bank at the Knight Library
author
Stagi, Shelby
2019-06-19T00:30:08Z
2019-06-19T00:30:08Z
2019-06-18
https://scholarsbank.uoregon.edu/xmlui/handle/1794/24642
Many US cities are experiencing exceptionally high
housing costs and housing shortages, this is especially true in
California, where housing costs greatly exceed those of the rest of
the nation. State law-makers and municipalities are looking for
ways to quickly improve the housing crisis. A promising strategy
for affordable housing can be found in low-density single family
neighborhoods; Accessory Dwelling Units (ADUs) offer the
opportunity to increase housing options, without greatly affecting
city character and existing infrastructure.
This project explores the potential of ADUs as a strategy
for sustainable growth in municipal density at multiple scales.
Currently ADUs are seen as sustainable options simply because of
their smaller footprint, but little research has been done to further
develop responsible ecologically and socially driven housing
opportunities. This project addresses the need for density while
striving for comfortable spaces that meet the needs of residents as
well as addressing the city’s goals for sustainability. This project
identifies barriers that prevent widespread implementation
of ADUs in San Jose, California through analysis of case
studies of municipal policy and surveys. Site scale designs and
performance analysis demonstrate that sustainable ADU design
can be added to residential lots while improving environmental
performance through on-site stormwater treatment, energy
savings, and a balance between privacy and communal space.
Policy recommendations further explore options to address these
concerns and mitigate potential negative impacts. This project
shows that sustainable ADU models can address many concerns
about densification and identifies challenges and benefits for
homeowners.
en_US
Creative Commons BY-NC-ND 4.0-US
Accessory dwelling unit
San Jose, CA
Landscape architecture
ADU
Tiny house
Sustainable guidelines
Developing Sustainable ADU Guidelines for San Jose, CA
Terminal Project
Tk9URTogUExBQ0UgWU9VUiBPV04gTElDRU5TRSBIRVJFClRoaXMgc2FtcGxlIGxpY2Vuc2UgaXMgcHJvdmlkZWQgZm9yIGluZm9ybWF0aW9uYWwgcHVycG9zZXMgb25seS4KCk5PTi1FWENMVVNJVkUgRElTVFJJQlVUSU9OIExJQ0VOU0UKCkJ5IHNpZ25pbmcgYW5kIHN1Ym1pdHRpbmcgdGhpcyBsaWNlbnNlLCB5b3UgKHRoZSBhdXRob3Iocykgb3IgY29weXJpZ2h0Cm93bmVyKSBncmFudHMgdG8gdGhlIFVuaXZlcnNpdHkgb2YgT3JlZ29uIChVTykgdGhlIG5vbi1leGNsdXNpdmUgcmlnaHQgdG8KcmVwcm9kdWNlLCBjb252ZXJ0IChhcyBkZWZpbmVkIGJlbG93KSwgYW5kL29yIGRpc3RyaWJ1dGUgeW91ciBzdWJtaXNzaW9uCihpbmNsdWRpbmcgdGhlIGFic3RyYWN0KSB3b3JsZHdpZGUgaW4gcHJpbnQgYW5kIGVsZWN0cm9uaWMgZm9ybWF0IGFuZAppbiBhbnkgbWVkaXVtLCBpbmNsdWRpbmcgYnV0IG5vdCBsaW1pdGVkIHRvIGF1ZGlvIG9yIHZpZGVvLgoKWW91IGFncmVlIHRoYXQgVU8gbWF5LCB3aXRob3V0IGNoYW5naW5nIHRoZSBjb250ZW50LCBjb252ZXJ0IHRoZQpzdWJtaXNzaW9uIHRvIGFueSBtZWRpdW0gb3IgZm9ybWF0IGZvciB0aGUgcHVycG9zZSBvZiBwcmVzZXJ2YXRpb24uCgpZb3UgYWxzbyBhZ3JlZSB0aGF0IHRoZSBVTyBMaWJyYXJpZXMgbWF5IGtlZXAgbW9yZSB0aGFuIG9uZSBjb3B5IG9mCnRoaXMgc3VibWlzc2lvbiBmb3IgcHVycG9zZXMgb2Ygc2VjdXJpdHksIGJhY2stdXAgYW5kIHByZXNlcnZhdGlvbi4KVGhlIExpYnJhcmllcyB3aWxsIG1ha2UgYSBnb29kIGZhaXRoIGVmZm9ydCB0byBwcmVzZXJ2ZSBhbmQgZGlzdHJpYnV0ZQp0aGlzIHN1Ym1pc3Npb24uICBJbiB0aGUgZXZlbnQgdGhhdCB0aGUgTGlicmFyaWVzIGFyZSB1bmFibGUgdG8gY29udGludWUKdG8gbWFpbnRhaW4gdGhpcyBzdWJtaXNzaW9uIGFzIHBhcnQgb2YgdGhlIGluc3RpdHV0aW9uYWwgcmVwb3NpdG9yeSwKdGhlIExpYnJhcmllcyByZXNlcnZlIHRoZSByaWdodCB0byByZXR1cm4gdGhlIGNvbnRlbnQgdG8gdGhlIHN1Ym1pdHRpbmcKZGVwYXJ0bWVudHMvdW5pdHMvaW5kaXZpZHVhbHMuIElmIHRoZSBlbnRpdHkgaXMgbm8gbG9uZ2VyIGluIGV4aXN0ZW5jZSwKb3IgaWYgdGhlIGluZGl2aWR1YWwgaXMgdW50cmFjZWFibGUsIHRoZSBMaWJyYXJpZXMgd2lsbCBhcnJhbmdlIHRvIGhhdmUKdGhlIG1hdGVyaWFscyBhcHByYWlzZWQgYW5kIHBvc3NpYmx5IGFyY2hpdmVkIGFzIHBhcnQgb2YgdGhlIHVuaXZlcnNpdHkncwpkaWdpdGFsIGFyY2hpdmVzLgoKWW91IHJlcHJlc2VudCB0aGF0IHRoZSBzdWJtaXNzaW9uIGlzIHlvdXIgb3JpZ2luYWwgd29yaywgYW5kIHRoYXQgeW91CmhhdmUgdGhlIHJpZ2h0IHRvIGdyYW50IHRoZSByaWdodHMgY29udGFpbmVkIGluIHRoaXMgbGljZW5zZS4gWW91IGFsc28KcmVwcmVzZW50IHRoYXQgeW91ciBzdWJtaXNzaW9uIGRvZXMgbm90LCB0byB0aGUgYmVzdCBvZiB5b3VyIGtub3dsZWRnZSwKaW5mcmluZ2UgdXBvbiBhbnlvbmUncyBjb3B5cmlnaHQuCgpJZiB0aGUgc3VibWlzc2lvbiBjb250YWlucyBtYXRlcmlhbCBmb3Igd2hpY2ggeW91IGRvIG5vdCBob2xkIGNvcHlyaWdodCwKeW91IHJlcHJlc2VudCB0aGF0IHlvdSBoYXZlIG9idGFpbmVkIGFueSBuZWNlc3NhcnkgcGVybWlzc2lvbiBmcm9tIHRoZQpjb3B5cmlnaHQgb3duZXIgdG8gZ3JhbnQgVU8gdGhlIHJpZ2h0cyByZXF1aXJlZCBieSB0aGlzIGxpY2Vuc2UsIGFuZCAKdGhhdCBzdWNoIHRoaXJkLXBhcnR5IG93bmVkIG1hdGVyaWFsIGlzIGNsZWFybHkgaWRlbnRpZmllZCBhbmQKYWNrbm93bGVkZ2VkIHdpdGhpbiB0aGUgdGV4dCBvciBjb250ZW50IG9mIHRoZSBzdWJtaXNzaW9uLgoKSUYgVEhFIFNVQk1JU1NJT04gSVMgQkFTRUQgVVBPTiBXT1JLIFRIQVQgSEFTIEJFRU4gU1BPTlNPUkVEIE9SIFNVUFBPUlRFRApCWSBBTiBBR0VOQ1kgT1IgT1JHQU5JWkFUSU9OIE9USEVSIFRIQU4gVU8sIFlPVSBSRVBSRVNFTlQgVEhBVCBZT1UgSEFWRQpGVUxGSUxMRUQgQU5ZIFJJR0hUIE9GIFJFVklFVyBPUiBPVEhFUiBPQkxJR0FUSU9OUyBSRVFVSVJFRCBCWSBTVUNICkNPTlRSQUNUIE9SIEFHUkVFTUVOVC4KClVPIHdpbGwgY2xlYXJseSBpZGVudGlmeSB5b3VyIG5hbWUocykgYXMgdGhlIGF1dGhvcihzKSBvciBvd25lcihzKSBvZgp0aGUgc3VibWlzc2lvbiwgYW5kIHdpbGwgbm90IG1ha2UgYW55IGFsdGVyYXRpb24sIG90aGVyIHRoYW4gYXMgYWxsb3dlZApieSB0aGlzIGxpY2Vuc2UsIHRvIHlvdXIgc3VibWlzc2lvbi4K
URL
http://scholarsbank.uoregon.edu/xmlui/bitstream/1794/24642/1/Stagi_Shelby_2019.pdf
File
MD5
91097ddbae329eb133069f777108c34b
20603473
application/pdf
Stagi_Shelby_2019.pdf
URL
http://scholarsbank.uoregon.edu/xmlui/bitstream/1794/24642/3/Stagi_Shelby_2019.pdf.txt
File
MD5
b60658ec7f43e2178574c37e0a122c25
118035
text/plain
Stagi_Shelby_2019.pdf.txt
oai:scholarsbank.uoregon.edu:1794/285082023-07-31T22:44:28Zcom_1794_7553com_1794_7552com_1794_7550col_1794_10476
Scholars' Bank at the Knight Library
advisor
Ribe, Rob
author
Teeler, Daniel
2023-07-10T20:53:44Z
2023-07-10T20:53:44Z
2023-06
https://scholarsbank.uoregon.edu/xmlui/handle/1794/28508
“I have used my time and resources through this master’s project to develop a speculative design of a car-free development. My design is intended to be a prospective design grounded in idealism similar to Ebenezer Howard’s ‘Garden Cities of Tomorrow’. Like Howard’s ‘Garden Cities’ I am proposing something new and beyond Transit Oriented Design. As of yet no large-scale intentionally designed car-free urban developments exist. There are car-free districts and towns in the world. Most have come to be car-free through some combination of impoverishment, lack of population, tourist appeal, lack of space for large roads, or geographic isolation.”
“This project has become an endeavor in research-through-design. I have searched through existing research and combined these with my own ideas to develop a number of goals and objectives essential to a car-free development. I implemented these into a concept masterplan for a transit-oriented district within an existing city. I then further developed a hierarchy of circulation typologies and areas of detailed design. And finally I concluded with a self-critique. My intention is that this can be used as a precedent by those who would attempt more work in the field of car-free urban design and transit-oriented development. It may prompt more intentional work in this area.”
en
Creative Commons BY-NC-ND 4.0-US
car-free
urban design
transit oriented development
micro vehicle
Down The Line In Gateway And Beyond
Thesis / Dissertation
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
URL
https://scholarsbank.uoregon.edu/xmlui/bitstream/1794/28508/1/teeler_2023.pdf
File
MD5
65ef6306a887b01064507d46ad23f89e
44335437
application/pdf
teeler_2023.pdf
URL
https://scholarsbank.uoregon.edu/xmlui/bitstream/1794/28508/3/teeler_2023.pdf.txt
File
MD5
a9ca33128cec3f1cff037c15ae05177e
53422
text/plain
teeler_2023.pdf.txt
oai:scholarsbank.uoregon.edu:1794/263362021-06-14T07:21:59Zcom_1794_7553com_1794_7552com_1794_7550col_1794_10476
Scholars' Bank at the Knight Library
author
Bowden, Taylor
2021-06-13T21:10:22Z
2021-06-13T21:10:22Z
2021-06-13
https://scholarsbank.uoregon.edu/xmlui/handle/1794/26336
Black, Indigenous, and Latinx folx face many barriers when trying to access public
natural areas. Park managers, designers, city staff, and community organizations can
build a more equitable future for our public natural areas by listening to the experiences
of those from marginalized communities and building mutually beneficial relationships
with them. On-site observations, visitor surveys, interviews and focus groups
provided insights into cultural barriers that Black, Indigenous, and Latinx folx face in
the outdoors, and the foundations for a toolkit that begins to address those barriers. By
focusing on the ideas and experiences of local individuals who self-identify as Black,
Indigenous, or Latinx as the generative force for solutions, the process and resultant
toolkit offer tangible steps that can be broadly applied to public natural areas within
North America, with specific application to the Howard Buford Recreation Area and Mt.
Pisgah in Eugene, Oregon as a case study. Five main barriers (exclusion, poor accommodations,
staff representation, racism, and safety) and eighteen sub-barriers were
identified through interviews. Subsequent focus groups generated thirty-four action
items to address these barriers, which were then organized into three types, community,
educational, and administrative, to create a toolkit for any public or community organization
to utilize. The community engagement and research methods of this project
demonstrate an approach that bridges from community brainstorming and storytelling
to recommend actionable items to enhance diversity, inequity, and inclusion within
public natural areas for Black, Indigenous, and Latinx communities.
en_US
Creative Commons BY-NC-ND 4.0-US
Public Natural Area
outdoor recreation
BIPOC
Barriers
Diversity
Equity
Inclusion
Social justice
Race
POC
equity toolkit
Racial Equity
Environmental Justice
Narratives in Nature: Black, Indigenous, and Latinx Inclusion in Public Natural Areas
Terminal Project
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
URL
http://scholarsbank.uoregon.edu/xmlui/bitstream/1794/26336/1/Bowden_Taylor_2021.pdf
File
MD5
82723689f3b378bda604418095ae6a8f
16799906
application/pdf
Bowden_Taylor_2021.pdf
URL
http://scholarsbank.uoregon.edu/xmlui/bitstream/1794/26336/3/Bowden_Taylor_2021.pdf.txt
File
MD5
7501e783efbd7d28961c34e345b77073
205613
text/plain
Bowden_Taylor_2021.pdf.txt
oai:scholarsbank.uoregon.edu:1794/246512020-03-29T07:27:54Zcom_1794_7553com_1794_7552com_1794_7550col_1794_10476
Scholars' Bank at the Knight Library
author
McComas, Sierra
2019-06-19T01:30:30Z
2019-06-19T01:30:30Z
2019-06-18
https://scholarsbank.uoregon.edu/xmlui/handle/1794/24651
Climate change, capitalism, globalism, densification of cities, and the rise of large
scale monocrop farming have created an environmental landscape of food instability and a lost
opportunity for human connection to and through food, especially in dense urban landscapes
like New York City.1 One solution to cultivate healthy human connections with and through
food, while also addressing economic and environmental pressures is through the practice of
rooftop farming. This research presents a guide to selecting potential sites for rooftop farm
development in NYC and what design typologies might be implemented. This work incorporates
the three elements of a sustainable business through the lens of the triple bottom line (people,
planet, and profit). This work uses a three phase process of GIS analysis and ground truthing,
typological classification schema via site visitation of case studies, and research by design to
produce potential projective designs pulling from the locations identified through GIS and the
typologies discovered. Through these methods, thousands of sites and many design potentials
were identified and categorized with relation to how they most strongly relate to one of the
three motivational elements of the triple bottom line and how each element influences a rooftop
farm development. This work intends to serve as a resource that will lead to the expansion and
proliferation of rooftop farming in urban environments.
en_US
Creative Commons BY-NC-ND 4.0-US
Urban agriculture
New York City
Green roofs
Rooftop farms
Intensive green roofs
GIS
Design
Landscape architecture
Design guide
Landscape architecture research
Identifying the Potential for Intensive Green Roof Farming in New York City
Terminal Project
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
URL
http://scholarsbank.uoregon.edu/xmlui/bitstream/1794/24651/1/McComas_Sierra_2019.pdf
File
MD5
650c2219d1fd40ee5e6344c9076be623
225882140
application/pdf
McComas_Sierra_2019.pdf
URL
http://scholarsbank.uoregon.edu/xmlui/bitstream/1794/24651/3/McComas_Sierra_2019.pdf.txt
File
MD5
0fdb3ecd88c2392cbffe804e9bb3fea2
297728
text/plain
McComas_Sierra_2019.pdf.txt
oai:scholarsbank.uoregon.edu:1794/225052017-07-10T08:03:42Zcom_1794_7553com_1794_7552com_1794_7550col_1794_10476
Scholars' Bank at the Knight Library
author
Oneal, Keegan
2017-07-10T02:42:27Z
2017-07-10T02:42:27Z
2017-07-09
http://hdl.handle.net/1794/22505
Emergence can be defined as “the movement from low-level rules to higherlevel
sophistication” (Johnson, 2001). Emergence helps to explain how
systems develop and change, and there is a growing body of literature where
emergence theory is used to explain urban environments as Complex Adaptive
Systems (CAS). A challenge remains, however, to translate our understanding
of emergence and CAS into operative guidelines for the design of resilient
urban environments.
Several landscape architectural theories including Landscape Urbanism,
Ecological Urbanism, and the writing of Rod Barnett have endeavored to
reconcile our understanding of CAS with the act of designing urban landscapes.
This project builds upon this discourse by applying Barnett’s description of
emergence theory to the design of specific landscape phenomena called green
urban commons (GUC). These niche landscape phenomena loosen existing
institutional structures and allow novel forms of land use to materialize
(Radywyl and Biggs 2013). Related to the nascent practice of iterative urbanism,
GUCs take various forms and o en involve the conversion of underutilized
urban land into productive community assets. These landscapes are iterated
and changed over time by stakeholders, and temporary land uses o en
transition to more fixed, institutionalized change.
The goal of this pragmatic research-through-designing project is to encourage
the creation of GUCs in San Diego’s Mid-City and Southeastern communities as
a means to improve resident quality of life and urban resilience. The explicit
application of emergence theory is presented as a way to enhance the landscape
quality of GUCs, and a framework is proposed to encourage and expedite the
development of new GUCs on city-owned vacant land in San Diego. To assess
the scalability of the framework’s prescriptive recommendations, portions of
the framework process are applied to three vacant urban lots in the Mid-City/
Southeastern San Diego study area. The speculative impacts of these case
studies are then discussed in light of Barnett’s criteria for civic landscapes that
exhibit emergent characteristics.
en_US
Creative Commons BY-NC-ND 4.0-US
Emergent Public Space: A Framework For New Green Urban Commons In San Diego
Terminal Project
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
URL
http://scholarsbank.uoregon.edu/xmlui/bitstream/1794/22505/1/Oneal_Keegan_2017.pdf
File
MD5
98a889bc576fedeb3c53ad2b4cb0d4f5
27786039
application/pdf
Oneal_Keegan_2017.pdf
URL
http://scholarsbank.uoregon.edu/xmlui/bitstream/1794/22505/3/Oneal_Keegan_2017.pdf.txt
File
MD5
8a078dd61055e93ca57691b19c1565ee
232289
text/plain
Oneal_Keegan_2017.pdf.txt
oai:scholarsbank.uoregon.edu:1794/285102023-07-31T22:51:41Zcom_1794_7553com_1794_7552com_1794_7550col_1794_10476
Scholars' Bank at the Knight Library
advisor
Ribe, Rob
author
Hopen, Delaney
2023-07-10T20:58:49Z
2023-07-10T20:58:49Z
2023-06
https://scholarsbank.uoregon.edu/xmlui/handle/1794/28510
0009-0008-3646-4727
An urban design methodology focused on regenerative processes and activity sports bring to the public realm.
en
Creative Commons BY-NC-ND 4.0-US
sports
urban design
landscape architecture
Regenerative Sport Urbanism
Thesis / Dissertation
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
URL
https://scholarsbank.uoregon.edu/xmlui/bitstream/1794/28510/1/hopen_2023.pdf
File
MD5
4d8b13c99cda39b2bb73e53bfa1af4c5
14965764
application/pdf
hopen_2023.pdf
URL
https://scholarsbank.uoregon.edu/xmlui/bitstream/1794/28510/3/hopen_2023.pdf.txt
File
MD5
b7cd2858e3299acf3697f8448a01d82a
65263
text/plain
hopen_2023.pdf.txt
oai:scholarsbank.uoregon.edu:1794/285112023-07-31T22:55:13Zcom_1794_7553com_1794_7552com_1794_7550col_1794_10476
Scholars' Bank at the Knight Library
advisor
Lopez Buson, Ignacio
author
Chapin, Hannah
2023-07-10T21:00:44Z
2023-07-10T21:00:44Z
2023-06
https://scholarsbank.uoregon.edu/xmlui/handle/1794/28511
This project explores a vernacular technology in the face of climate change, focusing on the efficiency of buried clay pot irrigation systems. These self-regulating systems reduce water use by 90% and promote plant survival during droughts. Leveraging 3D printing and algorithmic design, this project iteratively designs optimal forms considering water distribution, volume, and structural integrity. Computational modeling incorporates micro-climate variations for dynamic clay pot irrigation layouts. Pushing design boundaries and embracing digital fabrication, the project addresses a pressing climate challenge, advances landscape architect’s technologies, and serves as a cost-effective model for future adaptation.
en
Creative Commons BY-NC-ND 4.0-US
clay pots
irrigation
ollas
Unearthing Water Efficiency: Clay Pot Irrigation Design Through Digital Fabrication
Thesis / Dissertation
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
URL
https://scholarsbank.uoregon.edu/xmlui/bitstream/1794/28511/1/chapin_2023.pdf
File
MD5
18d356dbed3b0acef608c9cee57866e6
29997647
application/pdf
chapin_2023.pdf
URL
https://scholarsbank.uoregon.edu/xmlui/bitstream/1794/28511/3/chapin_2023.pdf.txt
File
MD5
890490ad1c055c230e48b222425e9211
91708
text/plain
chapin_2023.pdf.txt
oai:scholarsbank.uoregon.edu:1794/285062023-07-31T22:36:34Zcom_1794_7553com_1794_7552com_1794_7550col_1794_10476
Scholars' Bank at the Knight Library
advisor
Keeler, Harper
author
Witzleben, Jenna
2023-07-10T20:48:40Z
2023-07-10T20:48:40Z
2023-06
https://scholarsbank.uoregon.edu/xmlui/handle/1794/28506
0009-0008-0175-3844
This project was completed as a master’s project
within the Landscape Architecture department
at the University of Oregon from January
2022 to June 2023. In this section, I present the
relational methodology, topic focus on culturallyrelevant
medicinal landscapes, and the key
research questions of this project, followed by a
short summary of some of the research findings.
As will be described in this section, the body
of this project “report” is comprised of letters
written to particular audiences, including
my community collaborators and mentors.
The purpose of this introduction section is to
provide an orientation before reading any of
the personalized letters. It is also intended to
serve as a summary of the project for a “general
audience.”
en
Creative Commons BY-NC-ND 4.0-US
relationality
medicinal landscapes
biodiversity
health sovereignty
Biocultural Healing: Relational Methods for Extending Public Health Sovereignty in Eugene, Oregon
Thesis / Dissertation
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
URL
https://scholarsbank.uoregon.edu/xmlui/bitstream/1794/28506/1/witzleben_2023.pdf
File
MD5
4ab51b8c23aef7363c17a309aa7561fd
23480044
application/pdf
witzleben_2023.pdf
URL
https://scholarsbank.uoregon.edu/xmlui/bitstream/1794/28506/3/witzleben_2023.pdf.txt
File
MD5
e25ff0ffc70bcd180211d54c064f6a41
168424
text/plain
witzleben_2023.pdf.txt