Main author
Michael BrooksCharles Waldheim - Landscape as Urbanism: A General Theory
Charles Waldheim – ‘Landscape as Urbanism: A General Theory’
Published by Princeton University Press (2016)
In ‘Landscape as Urbanism’, author Charles Waldheim claims to have presented the first monographic account of a subject that has grown in prominence from a position of relative academic obscurity over the last decade-or-so. Waldheim , who is Professor and Chair of Landscape Architecture at Harvard University attempts to place landscape urbanism within the context of a broader set of historical, theoretical, and cultural conditions and proposes ‘a general theory for thinking the city through the medium of landscape.’
As an approximate definition, he suggests landscape urbanism is the theory of urban planning through the medium of landscape. It promotes the general idea that cities are best planned and organised, not through building and infrastructure design, but through the design of landscape.
In ‘Landscape as Urbanism’, Waldheim seeks nothing less than to establish the landscape architect as the urbanist of the age. Indeed, he presents a case early on, that ‘...the fundamental assumption that planning is the medium through which public policy and community participation are brokered may also be open for debate.’
Over the course of several chapters in this comprehensive book, Waldheim traces the history of landscape as a form of urbanism, from the Renaissance, through the dense industrial cities of the 19th century, to the early-20th century Fordist industrial economy, where landscape was reconceived as a medium of ecological planning. He states that in the contemporary post-Fordist industrial economy, ‘…landscape urbanism promises to clean the sites of the formerly industrial economy while integrating ecological function into the spatial and social order of the contemporary city.’
In so doing, Waldheim certainly makes a strong case for landscape urbanism, and, arguably, its inevitability. Perhaps such theories will become more prevalent and mainstream as people continue to densify in urban megacities over the next few decades.
The heavy text is scattered with generous illustrations that offer some interpretive clarity to what can become a vague and confusingly abstract subject. Mindful of this common criticism of the theory, with scant few real-life physical examples to draw from, the book includes works from around the world by designers such as Andrea Branzi, Frank Lloyd Wright, Michael Van Valkenburgh, and Ludwig Hilberseimer.
The thoroughness and depth of thought that Waldheim brings to this book and its ideas can feel rather like grappling with a piece of deconstructivist theory from the likes of Jacques Derrida or Jean Baudrillard. While this isn’t unnecessarily a bad thing, it can be more onerous and weighted down by academic verbiage than it needs to be, or ought to be for something purporting to be a ‘general theory’.
While those familiar with landscape urbanism will find a lot to appreciate in this intelligent and well-presented book, it may not succeed in enlightening a wider audience about this important but nuanced subject matter.
You can find out more and order the book here.
[edit] Find out more
[edit] Related articles on Designing Buildings Wiki:
- An Introduction to Passive House - review.
- BIM for Dummies - an interview.
- Biomimicry in Architecture - review.
- Brutalist London Map - review.
- ‘England’s Post-War Listed Buildings’.
- James Crawford - Fallen Glory.
- Landscape architect.
- Landscape urbanism.
- Last Futures: Nature, Technology and the End of Architecture.
- Living in the hyperreal post-modern city.
- London by Design - review.
- Manual of Section - review.
- Owen Hatherley interview.
- Owen Hatherley - Landscapes of Communism.
- Urban design.
Featured articles and news
BSRIA Statutory Compliance Inspection Checklist
BG80/2025 now significantly updated to include requirements related to important changes in legislation.
Shortlist for the 2025 Roofscape Design Awards
Talent and innovation showcase announcement from the trussed rafter industry.
OpenUSD possibilities: Look before you leap
Being ready for the OpenUSD solutions set to transform architecture and design.
Global Asbestos Awareness Week 2025
Highlighting the continuing threat to trades persons.
Retrofit of Buildings, a CIOB Technical Publication
Now available in Arabic and Chinese aswell as English.
The context, schemes, standards, roles and relevance of the Building Safety Act.
Retrofit 25 – What's Stopping Us?
Exhibition Opens at The Building Centre.
Types of work to existing buildings
A simple circular economy wiki breakdown with further links.
A threat to the creativity that makes London special.
How can digital twins boost profitability within construction?
The smart construction dashboard, as-built data and site changes forming an accurate digital twin.
Unlocking surplus public defence land and more to speed up the delivery of housing.
The Planning and Infrastructure Bill
An outline of the bill with a mix of reactions on potential impacts from IHBC, CIEEM, CIC, ACE and EIC.
Farnborough College Unveils its Half-house for Sustainable Construction Training.
Spring Statement 2025 with reactions from industry
Confirming previously announced funding, and welfare changes amid adjusted growth forecast.
Scottish Government responds to Grenfell report
As fund for unsafe cladding assessments is launched.
CLC and BSR process map for HRB approvals
One of the initial outputs of their weekly BSR meetings.
Building Safety Levy technical consultation response
Details of the planned levy now due in 2026.
Great British Energy install solar on school and NHS sites
200 schools and 200 NHS sites to get solar systems, as first project of the newly formed government initiative.
600 million for 60,000 more skilled construction workers
Announced by Treasury ahead of the Spring Statement.
Comments
A useful article.