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"There
clearly is a desperate need for professionals who are conservationists
by instinct, but who care not only to preserve but to create and
manage. These persons cannot be impeccable scientists for such purity
would immobilize them. They must be workmen who are instinctively
interested in the physical and biological sciences, and who seek
this information so that they may obtain the license to interpose
their creative skills upon the land. The landscape architect meets
these requirements."
-Ian McHarg, FASLA
As a new century
dawns, our crowded society is in ever-increasing need of sensible
planning. Sprawl, with its related problems of pollution, overcrowding,
and loss of open space, has become so prevalent that countless communities
are turning to landscape architects to craft "smart growth" solutions.
Always an environmentally
conscious profession, today landscape architects are at the forefront
of a movement to create livable communities--practical, sustainable,
and enjoyable developments that protect the natural world. In increasing
numbers, landscape architects are called upon to design large-scale
conservation plans, reclaim neglected inner-city brownfields, and
restore damaged wetlands and forests. The profession has never been
in so much demand.
Yet landscape
architecture firms cannot find enough qualified landscape architects
to meet this demand. Clearly, the profession is on the rise, and
the benefits of joining the profession are many. Budding landscape
architects will have the opportunity to work on diverse array of
projects and make important decisions that will benefit communities
for years to come. They will have the satisfaction of knowing that
their work protects the environment and improves the quality of
life. And, no less importantly, landscape architects will earn a
good living and have opportunities for advancement.
A Profession in Demand
Landscape architecture
is a comprehensive discipline of land analysis, planning, design,
management, preservation, and rehabilitation. Typical projects include
site design and planning, town and urban planning, regional planning,
environmental impact plans, garden design, historic preservation,
and parks design and planning. Landscape architects hold undergraduate
or graduate degrees and are licensed in 46 of the 50 states.
A recent report
by a national publication called landscape architecture a "hot-track
profession." Not only is nearly every landscape architecture student
assured of a job when he or she graduates, it is likely that several
offers might be on the table. Entry-level salaries are in keeping
with those of other professions, and after a decade or more landscape
architects can expect to be making a fairly healthy salary that
reportedly surpasses those of architects. A good number of landscape
architects attain a well-recognized status and a salary in the six
figures.
About 6,000
students attend accredited landscape architecture firms in the United
States and Canada. Most undergraduate landscape architecture degree
students go on to enter private practice, a smaller percentage work
for the government or multidisciplinary firms, and a few seek further
education. There is plenty of work to spare.
However, prospective
landscape architects should realize one thing about this kind of
work. Landscape architecture fulfills a special passion-really,
an ethic-that nearly all its practitioners have: a commitment to
making the world a better place.
A Noble Profession
The best landscape
architects care deeply about the health and well-being of people
and cultures. They want to ensure that development does not damage
environmental and cultural integrity. And they like to use products
and materials that will have as few impacts on the environment as
possible.
Landscape architects
take steps to forecast what the long-term impacts of a project will
be. Through the design and planning of places, they encourage the
adoption of healthy, environmentally sound, and responsible attitudes
by people who inhabit or use them. These professionals also generate
design, planning, management strategies, and policy from the basis
of the cultural context and the ecosystem to which each landscape
belongs. They strive to maintain, conserve, or reestablish the diversity
of biological systems and are committed to the use of native and
compatible materials and plants.
Furthermore,
landscape architects strive to develop and use building products
and materials that exemplify the principles of sustainable development.
They ensure that construction is of the highest quality, that site
protection is integral to the project, and that low-impact construction
technology is used during all phases of the process. Where waste
exists, landscape architects reuse, recycle, and transform.
Lastly, landscape
architects never stop learning. They seek constant improvement in
knowledge, abilities, and skills to more effectively achieve sustainable
development. And as they learn, landscape architects actively engage
in creating awareness of sustainable development among clients,
government, academia, students, and the public at large.
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