ұ & Jay Heritage Center Host Bridging the Nature-Culture Divide – A National, One-Day Cultural Landscape Stewardship Symposium, June 4
Media Contact: Nord Wennerstrom, Wennerstrom Communications | T: 202.255.7076 | E: nord@wennerco.com
Conference examines Balancing Ecology & History as part of Stewardship and Role of Design in the Nature-Culture divide
Washington, DC (May 3, 2011) – ұ (ұ) and the Jay Heritage Center will host Bridging the Nature-Culture Divide on Saturday, June 4, at the Jay Heritage Center (210 Boston Post Road, Rye, New York 10580). The national, one-day symposium, which runs 8:00AM-4:30PM, features six leading figures in landscape architecture and environmental design and will examine how cultural landscape stewardship balances competing agendas for ecology and history, and the role of design in this nature culture divide. The Jay Heritage Site, a National Historic Landmark, is currently wrestling with these very issues in developing an effective site stewardship plan making it an ideal location or “laboratory” for exploring such challenges. The symposium organizers aim to provoke discussion, push boundaries, and inspire solutions. Landscape Architecture Continuing Education System credits will be offered for this event.
The Jay Estate, a 23-acre National Historic Landmark in Rye, New York, and the ancestral home of John Jay, New York’s only native Founding Father, sits adjacent to the 137-acre Marshland Conservancy. The Jay property has in recent years been deteriorating due to deferred maintenance and the proliferation of invasive plants. Six speakers—Cheryl Barton; Charles A. Birnbaum; Rick Darke; Patricia O’Donnell; Douglas Reed; and Thomas Woltz—will examine broad history and ecology themes in cultural landscape stewardship; look at issues specifically facing the Jay site; review examples of other sites that successfully dealt with these issues; and address how present-day design solutions can respect and advance ecological and historic values.
Speakers and topics:
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Cheryl Barton, FASLA, FAAR, The Office Of Cheryl Barton, San Francisco, CA: Contested Landscapes: Ethics of Place;
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Charles Birnbaum, FASLA, FAAR, ұ: Symposium overview and facilitator of closing discussion;
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Rick Darke, Rick Darke LLC, Landenberg, PA: The Dynamic Nature of Cultural Landscapes;
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Patricia M. O'Donnell, FASLA, AICP, Heritage Landscapes LLC, Charlotte, VT and Norwalk, CT: The Jay Property & Marshlands Conservancy: Conflict & Balance for Cultural & Natural Values at a National Historic Landmark Property;
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Douglas Reed, FASLA, FAAR, Reed-Hilderbrand, Watertown, MA: Building the Case for Continuity and Change: Bennington College and the Clark Art Institute;
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Thomas Woltz, CLA, ASLA, Nelson Byrd Woltz Landscape Architects, Charlottesville, VA and New York, NY: Collaborative Design Process in Conflict Resolution in Historic, Agricultural, and Working Landscapes.
Tickets are available at: http://tclf.org/event, and the purchase price includes lunch and an evening reception. The reception will be held in conjunction with ұ’s Landslide 2010 “Every Tree Tells a Story” photography exhibition, featuring 26 images of 12 locations in the US and Puerto Rico, on view at the Jay Heritage Center through June 15, 2011.
The symposium is made possible by a grant from ConEdison, with additional support from City of Rye Sustainability Committee, New York Chapter of the American Society of Landscape Architects, New-York Historical Society, and Preservation League of New York.
About the Jay Heritage Center
The Jay Property () in Rye, New York, is the boyhood home of native New Yorker and Founding Father John Jay (1745-1829). Located next to a marshlands preserve with public trails, this sylvan and historic 23-acre park is all that remains of the original 400-acre Jay family estate where America's first Chief Justice of the US Supreme Court and author of The Jay Treaty grew up. Located just 35 minutes from Manhattan, the Property has an 8,000-year-old scenic vista of Long Island Sound over a meadow bordered by sunken stone ha-ha walls, a European garden design feature added by Jay's eldest son circa 1822. It was designated a National Historic Landmark in 1993. The Jay Heritage Center is the non-profit steward of the site and holds educational programs in American History, Landscape Conservation and Environmental Stewardship there for the public.
About ұ
The 12-year old Cultural Landscape Foundation (www.tclf.org) provides people with the ability to see, understand, and value landscape architecture and its practitioners, in the way many people have learned to do with buildings and their designers. Through its Web site, lectures, outreach and publishing, ұ broadens the support and understanding for cultural landscapes nationwide to help safeguard our priceless landscape heritage for future generations.