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110 records found

Urban Forestscapes

The City of Delft as a Woodland Complex

To understand the role of the urban forest for people and society a focus on the spatial-experiential aspect (in relation to the human body and human perception) is relevant: trees frame the space in which people move, act, experience and appreciate. ‘Tree language’ refers to the ...

Second Glance

Landscape Architecture Europe #6

It happens to all of us at one point or another: you walk through a park and think ‘OK, this is really pleasant’, and then leave and kind of forget about it. And when you visit, maybe by accident, for a second time, things have grown, the light is different, you walk from a diffe ...

Affective Encounters

Nature Close to The Skin

In an era of globalisation, landscape architects and urban designers have learnt to think big: large-scale plans with far-reaching visions, saving the planet and solving urgent global challenges. Usually, we try to solve these problems in the same way that we created them: with a ...

Introduction

Embracing the Future of the Wadden Sea Landscapes

How do young generations and educators envision the future of the Wadden Sea territories? How will these landscapes be modified in the years to come? How do we embrace the past and the present and imagine the future? […]@en

How Trees Shape Urban Spaces

Multiplicity and Differentiation of the Urban Forest Viewed from a Visual-Spatial Perspective

Background: The field of urban forestry encompasses many dimensions, of which that of visual-spatial perception, addressing the spatial relationship between city and trees, has received little attention. Analyzing the urban forest from a visual-spatial perspective is needed to un ...

Finding Atopia

Four Perspectives on the Non-Places of Today

In the format of a round-table discussion, we bring together voices from different departments, sections and roles within TU Delft to explore questions arising from the current issue of the magazine. Unlike the more familiar 'topias' like utopia and dystopia, atopia eludes clear ...

Augmenting socioecological dynamics in urban leftover spaces

Landscape architectural design as a foundation

Leftover spaces are urban interstices that are open to spontaneous socioecological appropriation, complementary to defined and managed urban open spaces. The design intervention of leftover spaces poses a paradox: while repurposing leftover spaces to make them accessible, usable ...
'The Garden as an Expression of Supernature' discusses the Wasserkrater Garden in Germany as an entry to define a contemporary interpretation of nature: "super-nature", which might be represented in gardens as a force of abundance, beautiful and dramatic, showing existence to its ...

Urban interstices

From atopia to heterotopia

Atopias are also often inaccessible and unwelcoming. With the Essenburgpark in Rotterdam as an example, the article explores the possibility of transforming these atopias into heterotopias, or other places: sheltered places that are contrary to their surroundings, and at the same ...

Cool Tree Architecture

A Descriptive Framework for a Tree Architecture Typology to Temper Urban Microclimates

As the elementary unit of the urban forest, trees temper thermal extremes in urban microclimates through shading and evapotranspiration, and by altering the movement of air. Metrics on shade performances of different species, however, are currently limited, which can be remedied ...

Operations on Railyard Sites, the Dutch Case

In between Landscape Design and Engineering

The technical landscape of railyard sites brings together a multidisciplinary set of expertise and needs. It entails the union of engineering and landscape design concerns, to redefine these spaces in the way they are maintained and potentially transformed. The paper gives an ove ...

Delft

Views on Delft

Around 1661, Johannes Vermeer painted what has become one of the most famous city views: the View of Delft. The city of Delft is depicted from across the water of the River Schie. We see the city as a collection of brick buildings with lower and higher towers, peaking into the sk ...
The urban environment is perceived through multiple senses in parallel, which means that visual understanding of space is aided and complemented by auditory, basic-orienting, and haptic stimuli - although mainly unconsciously. Sensory conditions are inherent attributes of urban p ...
Aan de hand van de daktuin van de auteur en de ontwikkeling daarvan, wordt de Nederlandse tuintraditie en de verschillende soorten van gebruik van tuinen beschreven. In de Renaissance gaven tuinen uitdrukking aan de nieuwe onafhankelijkheid. Erasmus beschreef de ideale burgermans ...
Designed form is not about creating a good appearance. Nor is it restricted to the small scale. The small scale, however, can be used as a valuable playground and laboratory for large scale landscape designs. Three case studies are compared in which similar compositional principl ...
This book is about the first ten years of the master track in Landscape Architecture at the Department of Urbanism in the Faculty of Architecture and the Built Environment at TU Delft. It delves into the personal, educational, didactical, organizational and, above all, substantiv ...

A Walk to the Cherwell River Meadows

(Meaningfulness and) the Perceivable Form of the Urban Landscape

Meaningfulness in the urban landscape is guided by perception: the qualities of the environment only become meaningful if they can be experienced. Experiences are localized in the physical environment: the form of the (urban) landscape - which includes materiality as well as stru ...
This issue of Spool – ‘Drawing Time’ – departs from the observation that the metropolitan landscape is subject to time, in many ways. The metropolitan landscape, as it has been studied in Spool over the years, is conceived as the interrelation between urban, infrastructural, rura ...