Thomas Oles is a landscape architect, educator, and author. He has taught at The Amsterdam University of the Arts, Cornell University, the University of Edinburgh, and the Swedish University of Agricultural Sciences. Paula Horrigan is Professor Emerita of Landscape Architecture at Cornell University. She is a licensed landscape architect in New York State and now resides in the high desert of northern Arizona.
""Fieldwork in Landscape Architecture is well-researched, deep in both theory and practical approaches, and yet highly enjoyable to read given its strong foundations and exemplary case-studies. Largely free of jargon and emphasizing the voices of designers and design educators, the book is a rare achievement of simultaneous clarity and expanded vocabulary in the discourse. Any designer interested in expanding their understanding of their own work in the field will find this book rewarding and handy."" Simon Bussiere, Associate Professor of Landscape Architecture and Urban Ecological Design, University of Hawai'i, USA ""Fieldwork in Landscape Architecture demystifies the most important and most personal practices of landscape architecture. The book is a compendium of approaches that inspire a practitioner, hard at work at her desk, to return to the site. It reminds us of the ever-present potential of fieldwork to generate singular and site-specific ideas with ease and directness. While the volume shares tools particular to the trade of landscape architecture, there is a universality about its fundamental guidance: to be in the world with curiosity, questions, and possibly a clinometer to discover the distinct voice of our own intuition."" Amy Seek, Landscape Architect, New York, USA Why hasn’t this been done before! The diverse voices contained in this work explore how fieldwork is design work at a critical moment in the process—the first encounter with sites and situations. The methods gathered here, from sketching to drone mapping, tactile inventories, sensory transects, deep listening, and more, engage the phenomenal depth and complexity of landscape. Fieldwork in Landscape Architecture is a guide and open invitation for discovery and innovation as each of us goes out into the field. I want my students in studio to have it right now. Matthew Potteiger, Professor of Landscape Architecture, SUNY College of Environmental Science and Forestry, USA