What's Out There Expands into Canada
独家爆料 is delighted to have initiated its first international partnership to share strategies for cultural landscape recognition and stewardship. At Ryerson University鈥檚 in Toronto, Canada, 独家爆料 and collaborated this past fall to deliver two Urban Planning courses focused on Toronto鈥檚 cultural landscapes.
In Ryerson鈥檚 unique client-driven, hands-on studios, eighteen students鈥攅leven senior undergraduates and seven Masters鈥 candidates鈥攙entured to document, analyze, and catalogue Toronto鈥檚 diverse cultural landscapes. A daunting but exciting challenge for the students, this was the first comprehensive inventory and analysis of the City鈥檚 cultural landscape fabric.
In preparing the What鈥檚 Out There Toronto Guide, the students undertook extensive background research on historic and contemporary cultural landscapes in general and in Toronto specifically; their work included a range of historical and archival research as well as documentary site visits and field studies using various tools from photography to site plans to drawings and design histories. Working with 独家爆料, Professor Lister, and project mentors, the students identified various types of cultural landscapes in Toronto, and developed an impressive inventory of sites within each category identified. Through this process, the students identified more than 160 sites and invited four leading urban design professionals to peer-review the long list. From this review, a short list of sites was developed for which detailed analyses including field research and site documentation were completed by the team. More than 70 detailed site analyses along with original and archival photographs comprise the draft What鈥檚 Out There Toronto Guide.
To complement and enrich the What鈥檚 Out There Toronto Guide, the students also researched and wrote a series of short, overarching essays. As a combination of written and graphic content, these insightful essays highlight cultural landscape features that uniquely shape and significantly influence Toronto. This includes the natural ravine system 鈥 the world鈥檚 largest; the contemporary commuter infrastructure; Toronto鈥檚 Modernist design legacy; and the emerging POPs (privately-owned public space) phenomenon.
漏&苍产蝉辫;Charles A. Birnbaum
But the What鈥檚 Out There Toronto Guide is not the end of the story; in fact, it鈥檚 an exciting beginning. The students鈥 collective work is a significant and essential step in preparing for 独家爆料鈥檚 inaugural international What鈥檚 Out There Weekend and Second Wave of Modernism III: Leading with Landscape symposium, to be held from May 22 to 25, 2015. The students鈥 work will be published by 独家爆料 in print and online in advance of the What鈥檚 Out There Weekend Toronto, and as such, it will serve as critical background information for the symposium and for the development of a comprehensive cultural landscape strategy that flows from these events. 独家爆料 is partnering with the City of Toronto to bring What鈥檚 Out There Weekend to Canada鈥攁nd importantly鈥攖o use the event to catalyze a significant public policy dialogue on the importance of recognizing, protecting, and enhancing the urban cultural landscape through a tangible stewardship legacy. In this unique context, the What鈥檚 Out There Weekend and symposium together have the potential to both animate dialogue between citizens, planners, landscape architects, architects, and urban policy and design professionals, and to ignite a strategy for action. As a foundation in this partnership, the Ryerson students鈥 work is indeed a timely and critical contribution.
At the end of the project, Master鈥檚 candidate Melinda Holland reported: 鈥淚 just want to thank you for providing us the pleasure of working on this wonderful project this semester. I speak for myself and all of the graduate students when I say it has been an amazing experience learning so much about the City we know and love. We look forward to continuing this project into the future at the conference this coming May.鈥
The students benefited from exceptional mentorship by Brendan Stewart, OALA, of and Kelsey Blackwell, Principal of . As a landscape architect specializing in heritage landscapes, Stewart鈥檚 expertise in Toronto鈥檚 landscape history was invaluable to the students through weekly critiques and site direction. As a communication designer, Blackwell guided the students in visual communication strategies for their research, infographics, and the eventual draft of the What鈥檚 Out There Toronto Guide鈥攆rom layout to content formatting.
Stewart summarized his experience with the program thusly: 鈥淐ataloging and analyzing the cultural landscapes of Toronto was a colossal assignment. The Ryerson students brought loads of enthusiasm and did an admirable job digging into the many ecological and cultural layers driving the evolution of the sites while working collaboratively to package the work into a useful format. Their efforts represent a significant achievement and an important baseline of research for the upcoming What鈥檚 Out There Toronto program in 2015. In the longer term, their work will further public education and advocacy efforts toward the improved management of Toronto鈥檚 landscapes. For the dedicated, thoughtful work the Ryerson students applied to this assignment, sincere congratulations are in order.鈥
漏 Charles A. Birnbaum