David Malda presents Working With: A Relational Practice at 2024 Texas ASLA Conference

April 25, 2024 – David Malda, ASLA, LEED AP, presented at this year’s Texas ASLA Annual Conference in Austin, Texas.

David’s presentation, Working With: A Relational Practice, touched on the expression of GGN’s design approach in its work around the country and explored the potential of connecting people to the land and to each other through the land. David also explained how our work as landscape architects can help support broader initiatives for belonging to a place, rather than simply adding another new thing.

This year’s conference included Nicholas Nelson, RLA, LEED AP, Director of Landscape Architecture at Teague Nall and Perkins; Mikey Goralnik, PLA, AICP, Trails and Transportation Planner at Great Springs Project; Garry Merritt, CEO of Great Springs Project; Scott Parker, Land Transactions Director at Great Springs Project; Vincent Debrock, ISA Board Certified Master Arborist at Shademaker Studio; and Shaney Clemmons, ASLA, PLA, Principal at Shademmaker Studio.

Texas ASLA Conference is a 3-day event held annually and is known as the 2nd largest ASLA conference. The theme of this year’s conference was “PIVOT,” which focused on the importance of pivoting in the direction of “sustainability and climate positivity” amid concerns about the climate crisis.

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Rodrigo Abela participates in the 4th annual MICD Just City Mayoral Fellowship

April 18, 2024 – Rodrigo Abela is participating as a Resource Team Member in the 4th Annual Mayors’ Institute on City Design (MICD) Just City Mayoral Fellowship program. The program is in partnership with the Just City Lab at the Harvard Graduate School of Design. Over a semester-long program, the Lab’s Just City Index frames dynamic presentations and dialogues with experts in the fields of architecture, landscape architecture, urban planning, art activism, housing, and public policy. Throughout the Fellowship, mayors and their staff identify how injustices manifest in the social, economic, and physical infrastructures of their cities and develop manifestos of action for their communities, applying the language and tactics of racial justice to the neighborhood’s future.

The 2024 MICD Just City Mayoral Fellows are: Allentown, PA Mayor Matthew Tuerk; Dearborn, MI Mayor Abdullah H. Hammoud; Lima, OH Mayor Sharetta Smith; Long Beach, CA Mayor Rex Richardson; McMinnville, OR Mayor Remy Drabkin; Racine, WI Mayor Cory Mason; and San Rafael, CA Mayor Kate Colin.

The Mayors’ Institute on City Design (MICD) is a leadership initiative of the National Endowment for the Arts in Partnership with the United States Conference of Mayors. Since 1986, the Mayors’ Institute has helped transform communities through design by preparing mayors to be the chief urban designers of their cities.

Rodrigo also participated as an MICD Resource Team Member in 2012 and 2018.

Learn more on the MICD's website.

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David Malda presents Working With: A Relational Practice at the University of Calgary

March 13, 2024 – David Malda spoke at Design Matters at the University of Calgary School of Architecture, Planning and Landscape in Alberta, Canada.

David presented Working With: A Relational Practice, where he spoke about his distinct approach and prior work, such as the Hemisfair Civic Park, to students, industry professionals, public officials, and curious members of the public. David’s presentation focused on his approach to connecting the people and the land through landscape and thinking about what is already there.

This year’s Design Matter speakers include Johanna Hurme, Co-Founder and Managing Partner of 5468796 Architecture; Ana de Brea, Architecture Professor and Practitioner; Isabel Ochoa, Designer and Faculty Member at the University of Waterloo School of Architecture; Teresa Williamson, Ph. D., Environmentalist and Founding Executive Director of Catalytic Communities; Teddy Cruz, Professor of Public Culture and Urbanization at the University of California, San Diego, Department of Visual Arts; Sara Candiracci, Associate Director in Arup’s Cities, Planning and Design team in Milan, and Global Leader for Social Value and Equity; and Miquel Adria, an Architect from Higher Technical School of Architecture of Barcelona and a Doctor of Architecture from the European School of Madrid.

Design Matters is a lecture series that is organized by the University of Calgary’s School of Architecture, Planning and Landscape. These lectures feature a variety of designers and innovators to help initiate meaningful conversations about architecture, landscape architecture, and regional & urban planning. The theme of this year’s lecture series emphasizes “global citizenship and design in conjunction with the launch of the new Bachelor of Design in City Innovation undergraduate degree program.”

View the full video on the UCalgary SAPL YouTube Channel.

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David Malda presents Working With: A Relational Practice at 2024 Northern Green Conference

January 23, 2024 – David Malda participated at this year’s Northern Green Conference hosted by Minnesota Nursery & Landscape Association and Northern Green trade show in Saint Paul, Minnesota.

David presented Working With: A Relational Practice, where he spoke on the potential of landscape to connect people to the land and to each other through the land and highlighted the development of relationships between people and places through prior work he has completed. He also touched on the idea of “working with” as a process of understanding what is already here, how it came to be the way it is, and how we can craft strategies for the future of this foundation.

This year’s Northern Green Conference speakers included Matt Haber, Landscape Design Director at Western DuPage Landscaping, Inc.; Tony Wasemann, Design Team Manager at Scott Byron & Co., Inc.; Garth Woodruff, Professor at Andrews University and Partner at RootBound; Elizabeth Wynne, CLP, Landscape Designer at Biota Landscapes; Alyson Landmark, Landscape Designer at Southview Design; and Nels Peterson, COLD, Vice President of Bingle Premier Outdoor Lighting, Horsepower Brands.

The Northern Green Conference is known for being the largest green industry trade show and educational conference in the north-central region. Attendees ranging from MNLA members and arborists to landscape designers and architects all come to learn and network with each other.

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Seattle Residence: Native Gardens wins Design Futurist Award

October 23, 2023 – Pacific Horticulture announced this past week that Seattle Residence: Native Gardens has won the Design Futurist Top Prize. For the inaugural year of this award, the jury was seeking projects that exemplify climate-resilient garden design and embody values such as biodiversity, sustainability, and finding joy in nature.⁣

We're honored to hear the jury found this space "dreamy" and "stunning" and that "It had all the wildness that you could ever want, just cheerfully tamed. Everything felt like it had migrated into its place and was happy there.”

Read more about this award and additional honorees.

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Shannon Nichol presents Empathy and Comfort in Landscape Design at the University of Idaho

October 20, 2023 – Shannon Nichol gave a virtual presentation to students, faculty members, and dean of the University of Idaho College of Art and Architecture.

Shannon’s presentation, Empathy and Comfort in Landscape Design, discusses her thoughts and experiences in designing a vast range of landscapes, from monumental and abstract to small-scaled and intimate, that takes people’s emotional and physical comfort into consideration. Her presentation included different GGN projects, including the Lurie Garden, India Basin Shoreline Parks, and several smaller gardens.

Students attending this presentation were working on designing a Healing Garden and Memorial site to honor the four students who were slain in the horrific murders during the fall of 2022, as well as to honor other students who are lost every year. Taking insights from Shannon about bridging people both physically and emotionally to their local landscape, this project would connect family, friends, and other students to the stories and memories of those who were lost.

Past guests who have given lectures include Mark de Reus, founding partner of Reus Architects and writer; Alexis Townsend, the President of Lombard/Conrad Architects and serves on the Dean’s Advisory Council of the University of Idaho and the Advisory Board for Idaho Women in Architecture, Engineering and Construction, and the Capital City Development Corporation Board of Commissioners; and Kate Holgate, the CCO of Stoltz Marketing Group and Board Member of The Children’s Home Society of Idaho.

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NewsJason KimMoscow, ID2024
David Malda presents Wisconsin Wonders: A Future Museum for Curious and Connected Communities

October 20, 2023 – David Malda spoke to the Garden Club of Greater Milwaukee about GGN’s work on the new Milwaukee Public Museum.

In his talk, Wisconsin Wonders: A Future Museum for Curious and Connected Communities, David shared the design and broader context for the garden at the new museum. This garden will be constructed on land that has been home to Indigenous peoples for thousands of years. In the 1800s, the area became a hay market where the agricultural transformation of the surrounding landscape fueled the brewing and other local industries. After years of redlining, the urban renewal program of the 1960s razed the surrounding African American neighborhood of Bronzeville and constructed a highway. This land has been shaped by these stories from the past and many more are still waiting to be told. They are all part of the ground.

The garden is envisioned as a place for fostering connections between this specific moment and the daily life of the neighborhood, school visits, citizen science, and other community and museum events. For some, it will be an introduction to Milwaukee and the neighborhood. For others, it will be a first-time experience with native plants close to home. The garden orients to adjacent housing and numerous community services. Planting strategies draw from restoration and early successional ecologies on this disturbed site. The hope is that kids will be offered a relationship with nature that is desperately needed for them at this time. While small in footprint, the lessons of these plants and the voices of community partners hosted here can have much greater impacts. A museum and a garden are both places to learn those lessons that challenge our understanding of the world around us, take them home, and use them to support broader change.

Past guest speakers for the Garden Club of Greater Milwaukee include Nancy Cody, GCGM president, certified floral designer, and owner of Rose and Twig Floral Design; Eric Manges, on-air meteorologist for FOX6 and weather expert; David Robson, chairperson for the National Garden Club PLANT AMERICA Community Grant; Elaine Zautke, manager at Lakeshore State Park; and James Steiner, designer of the oasis representing landscape architectural firm Helianthus.

Learn more about the Milwaukee Public Museum.

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GGN Launches a New Initiative: Meadowshop

October 1, 2023 – GGN has launched a new initiative: Meadowshop.

We believe that everyone should be able to live immersed in authentic, local nature that tells the true story of their home. We formed Meadowshop to make this site-specific, local landscape more accessible to people who live in our home region of the Pacific Northwest. ⁣

At the same time as offering all-native residential garden services, Meadowshop is a community of much-needed demonstration and testing plots across the city and region. Together, many small plots can collectively grow our region’s knowledge of best practices with these under-utilized but garden-worthy plants. ⁣

GGN is excited to work with homeowners in the Pacific Northwest who long to transform their outdoor space into an all-native garden that is exuberant and intriguing throughout the seasons, supporting local insect, bird, and wildlife populations, and richly instructive as an example of the plants that have long called this region home.⁣

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Hemisfair Civic Park to Open

September 28, 2023 – San Antonio’s new 7-acre Hemisfair Civic Park will open to the public this Saturday, September 30, 2023. GGN led the project alongside the City of San Antonio and Hemisfair Park Area Redevelopment Corporation (HPARC) in collaboration with the contractor Skanska and the larger design team. Saturday’s celebration marks the Phase 1 opening, and the park will be completed with Phase 2 in late 2024.

Located within the 1968 “HemisFair” International Exposition grounds, Hemisfair Civic Park is adjacent to the world-famous River Walk and surrounded by several vibrant and growing neighborhoods. The park design introduces public plazas and courtyards, an event lawn and stage, intimate gardens with springs, and a promenade that connects spaces within and beyond the park. Designed as a “place that fits” San Antonio’s life, character, and vision, the Civic Park’s design is rooted in the history of this place while also looking to its future.

“Hemisfair is all about building connections to the amazing regional landscape, the city’s unique fabric, and most of all to the lives of San Antonians,” said David Malda, Design Principal at GGN. “Civic Park is a key piece of the larger urban transformation of a former World’s Fair site into a more livable and welcoming place.” 

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The Spring District Transformation: from Industrial Warehouses to Community Hub

September 15, 2023 – David Malda, ASLA, LEED AP, and Chihiro Shinohara gave a walking tour presentation for the annual Washington Chapter of the American Society of Landscape Architects (WASLA) Conference Call.

This walking tour titled The Spring District Transformation: from Industrial Warehouses to Community Hub was designed to explore the following themes:

  • Anchoring a large mixed-use development on a central public space, which was largely designed and partially constructed prior to the surrounding phased buildings. This public realm design worked to advance the overall narrative of the place by connecting this new development with the largely erased histories of the site.

  • Working with the necessary flexibility of a developer-driven process to support the continuity of big ideas even when there were substantial shifts in the development along the way.

Other professionals that attended the event included Ernest Wong, PLA, FASLA, APA, Founding Principal and President of Site Design Group; Kate Brooks, PLA, LEED AP, Associate Principal at ZGF Architects; Eric Higbee, a Lecturer and Affiliate Faculty Member at the University of Washington, Landscape Architect, Community Organizer, Writer, and Researcher; and Charles Anderson, FASLA, Landscape Architect and Sculptor.

This year’s WASLA Conference focused on the theme of “Exchange” with the goal of having design professionals exchange ideas and tools with each other to help transform concepts into realities. The event incorporated hi-tech spaces that allowed attendees to share graphics and models, further encouraging the idea of exchange between attendees.

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Water Ribbon Garden at Dongtan Yeoul Park Opens

July 5, 2023 – The Water Ribbon Garden at Dongtan Yeoul Park has opened in the Seoul Metropolitan Region. A spiraling stone and water ribbon encircles the Great Lawn, offering respite and cool water for parkgoers to dip their toes into. The interactive water feature embodies the story of life through Korean symbology in the texture and flow of water over it, changing its expression constantly along its 280m length. The Lawn provides a flexible space for various activities, from small gatherings to large, community events.

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Burke Museum Highlighted in Seattle Times

May 19, 2023 – Erica Browne Grivas recently highlighted the Camas meadow garden at the Burke Museum in a Seattle Times feature on native prairies in Washington state:

“In designing the verdant area, landscape architect Shannon Nichol of GGN took inspiration from the theme of the museum’s main building: transparency.

“It made us ask the question, ‘How do you decolonize an ethnobotanical garden?’” Nichol said. “In Seattle, we are talking about less than 200 years of documented history, yet under our feet is this thousands-year-old truth of what this place has been, compared to this very recent transformation.” 

Read the full story at the Seattle Times: Why conservation groups are trying to restore native prairies in WA

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Shannon Nichol presents Rediscovering Home with PNW Native Plants in Design

February 22, 2023 – Shannon Nichol, FASLA, PLA, LEED AP, is presenting two lectures in Vancouver, BC, Canada this week. Today, she is lecturing at the University of British Columbia’s Friends of the Botanical Garden and tomorrow she is speaking to the British Columbia Recreation and Parks Association tomorrow.

Shannon’s presentations are tailored for each organization, but both address the theme of Rediscovering Home with PNW Native Plants in Design. Shannon shares her evolving relationship with plants as a Pacific Northwest landscape architect emerging from the plants-as-sculpture era in which she established her firm and career. During a period where she re-educated herself in plants and animals of her home region, Shannon committed to using locally native plants in all GGN projects after the realization that her role as a landscape architect with a platform and an established firm plays a part, complacently or strategically, in the sixth mass extinction and alarming drop in insect populations across the Earth.

Other professionals who will be speaking at the latter event include Douglas Justice, Associate Director and Curator of Collections at the UBC Botanical Garden; Ron Jacobson, Business Development Manager at NATS Nursery; Jonathon Morris, CEO at the Canadian Mental Health Association BC Division; and Karin England, Landscape Architect with Metro Vancouver Regional Parks and Project Manager.

These lectures will provide valuable learning experiences for participants, ranging from fellow landscape architects to master gardeners and horticulturalists, that are eager to hear about and learn from Shannon experience in utilizing nature and how it influences the work that is done with GGN through projects, such as the Meadowshop Initiative.

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NewsJason KimSeattle, WA2020
Vision for Lock & Dam Honors Dakota History

February 3, 2023 – Today, Friends of the Falls unveiled early design ideas for the land adjacent to the St. Anthony Falls Upper Lock and Dam. The group, which formed in 2016 after the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers announced its intention to discontinue use of the lock, has been exploring new uses of the facility and surrounding land. These early design ideas for the Mississippi River Lock & Dam Land honor Dakota history as the project transitions to Native leadership.

The early design ideas depicted in concept drawings by GGN, in partnership with local architect VJAA, were the result of direction from the Native Partnership Council. Friends of the Falls, the Native American Community Development Institute (NACDI) and CDA Enterprises convened the group of elected tribal leaders, Native artists, and elders to set guiding principles for the project. The Council’s vision statement calls for restored connections to the river, honoring Dakota culture and language, and ongoing care for the land and water.

“Members of the Native Partnership Council, tribal communities, and the general public have shared their personal stories and connections to this place. The water is at the heart of them all,” said Kjersti Duval, project director of The Falls Initiative. “The design concepts honor these relationships to the River, while acknowledging the complexities of the site.”

View the full press release on the Friends of the Falls' website.

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Shannon Nichol presents Good Problems at the University of Pennsylvania

October 27, 2022 – Shannon Nichol is attending a studio review hosted by the University of Pennsylvania Stuart Weitzman School of Design.

Shannon is presenting Good Problems, where she will use project-process examples from her time with GGN and share drawings, diagrams, and other problem-solving tools. With the student or young professional in mind. Shannon will talk about how a designer can embrace or reembrace the pleasurable mindset toward problem-solving to address any significant issues in projects.

Other professionals that have given lectures in the past include Catherine Seavitt Nordenson, FASLA, AIA, a Professor and Director of the Graduate Landscape Architecture Program at the Spitzer School of Architecture; Rossana Hu, Co-Founder of Neri&Hu Design and Research; Mikyoung Kim, an International Designer and Founding Principal of Minkyoung Kim Design; and Rania Ghosn, an Associate Professor of Architecture and Urbanism at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology and Founding Partner of DESIGN EARTH.

True to GGN’s mission of exciting and inspiring others through its work, Shannon’s presentation is an exciting opportunity for students to develop a positive mindset which can help them overcome important problems that they will encounter in their careers.

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GGN Donates to SJSE Scholarship Programs

October 10, 2022 – GGN is pleased to contribute to diversity scholarships at the University of Washington, Washington State University, Landscape Architecture Foundation, and Black Landscape Architects Network.

Washington State University’s School of Design and Construction and the University of Washington’s College of Built Environments are working together with Site Workshop, GGN, and Berger Partnership to create an endowed scholarship in their respective landscape architecture programs to support students who identify as Black, Indigenous, and People of Color (BIPOC). Initiated in 2020, both scholarship funds are now fully endowed. GGN continues to contribute annually to make scholarship funds more available to BIPOC students.

This fall, the Landscape Architecture Foundation launched their new multi-year program coined LAF Ignite, which is a comprehensive Scholarship + Internships + Mentorship program for BIPOC college students, providing participants with an annual scholarship, annual paid summer internship, and access to mentors throughout their educational path.

Each year, 3 students are accepted into Ignite and participate until they have completed their landscape architecture degree. Every new cohort joins the group from past years for facilitated virtual meetings and peer-to-peer mentorship. Participants are matched with a one-on-one mentor and use paid summer internships to explore different career paths within landscape architecture.

BlackLAN (BLAN) has a long history of working to increase the visibility, support the interests, and foster the impact of Black practitioners in Landscape Architecture. Donations made to BLAN will support Black landscape architecture students and emerging professionals through scholarship and grants ensuring career retention and advancement within the profession, while also supporting students and emerging professional opportunities to travel to and attend LABASH and ASLA.

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NewsGuest User2020
GGN and Paul Bauknight launch new Spatial Justice and Social Equity Residency

September 20, 2022 – GGN is sponsoring a yearlong Spatial Justice and Social Equity (SJSE) Residency with Paul Bauknight, founder of the Center for Transformative Urban Design.

“My goal for the GGN SJSE Residency,” said Paul Bauknight, “is to amplify opportunities to transform cities, neighborhoods, and the public realm by empowering communities to rethink urban design systems and policies so that we can create genuinely equitable community development. I am excited to partner with GGN because of their commitment to moving this change forward.”

Rikerrious Geter, Community Partnerships Lead at GGN added, “We see our partnership with Paul Bauknight as a catalyst for more fully integrating our Spatial Justice and Social Equity initiatives into all aspects of our firm. Our work with Paul will allow us to test important ideas, connect with more communities, and share our progress and process with the field.”

The SJSE Residency builds upon GGN’s SJSE Action Plan. This work plan focuses on racially equitable, socially inclusive, and impactful practices with the goal of creating ever more healthy and accessible landscapes.

View GGN’s Spatial Justice and Social Equity Action Plan here.

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NewsGuest UserSeattle, WA2020
Chihiro Shinohara Presents Dongtan Water Ribbon Process at IFLA 2022

September 15, 2022 – Chihiro Shinohara shared GGN’s process of designing and creating the intricate water ribbon at Cheonggye Central Park in collaboration with HLD, LH, and SNU. The design concept centers around a spiraling water feature that encompasses a great lawn. The interactive water feature expresses the story of life through Korean symbology in the texture and flow of water along its 280m length. The ribbon is are inspired by four motifs frequently used in Korean mythology and tradition: the Butterfly, the Dragon, the Tiger, and the Mountain. The end of the water feature is a calm water basin that reflects the cityscape of Dongtan and the sky beyond.

Watch the full video recording here.

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Design for Milwaukee Public Museum is Featured in The Architect's Newspaper

August 1, 2022 – Design plans for the Milwaukee Public Museum have been featured in The Architect’s Newspaper, offering residents and visitors a first look at the Future Museum. The museum will be located in the Haymarket Neighborhood and is being designed by Ennead Architects and Kahler Slater. GGN is the landscape architect and Thinc Design is the exhibition designer.

The design is “guided by the four core principles of community, nature, education, and the preservation of the museum’s collections.”

VIEW THE FULL ARTICLE HERE

Image Credit: Ennead Architects

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