McIver Amphitheater, Raleigh, NC
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Remembering Esteemed Landscape Architect Richard Bell

EDITOR鈥橲 NOTE: 独家爆料 marks the passing of landscape architect Richard Bell, who died peacefully at home in the hours just before noon on Monday, March 16, 2020, at the age of 91. A version of the following biographical essay, authored by Rodney L. Swink, appeared in 独家爆料鈥檚 Shaping the Postwar Landscape, published in 2018.

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Richard Chevalier 鈥淒ick鈥 Bell was born on April 10, 1928, in Manteo, North Carolina. His father, Englishman Albert Quentin 鈥淏ert鈥 Bell, immigrated to Canada in 1911 and then, in 1919, to Elizabeth City, North Carolina, where he met and eventually married Maud Price. Sharing a love of plants, the couple opened and ran a nursery in addition to their regular jobs. In 1933 the Bells moved to Roanoke Island, where Bert worked for the Works Progress Administration. He took on occasional projects as a designer and builder, including a camp for the Civilian Conservation Corps, and he took correspondence courses in surveying and landscape design.

Dick Bell enrolled at North Carolina State College (now University) in 1945, originally studying chemical engineering despite his family鈥檚 background in plants, design, and construction. On his father鈥檚 advice, Bell switched to landscape architecture in his sophomore year, studying under Edwin Gil Thurlow and Lawrence Enersen before graduating in 1950. Thurlow triggered Bell鈥檚 passion for landscape architecture, and Enersen, who was trained in both landscape architecture and architecture, taught Bell to understand a project from an architect鈥檚 perspective. Bell got his 铿乺st real job in the 铿乪ld from Professor Morley Je铿ers Williams, who was working on a master plan for the college鈥檚 campus and hired Bell to make color renderings. The work helped pay Bell鈥檚 tuition and sparked his interest in campus planning.

It was also Professor Williams who alerted Bell to the Rome Prize, which North Carolina State graduate George Patton had won in 1948. When Bell applied in 1950, the jury, comprising Michael Rapuano, Ralph Griswold, Alfred Gei铿ert, Jr., Richard K. Webel, and Gilmore David Clarke, made clear to him their interest in choosing someone who would establish landscape architecture in the American South. Bell assured them he would be that person, but he did not win the Rome Prize until one year later, in 1951. In the meantime, he accepted an apprenticeship with the o铿僣e of Simonds and Simonds in Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania. There he absorbed the design philosophy of John Simonds and Philip Simonds鈥檚 methods for making working drawings and construction details. Bell then spent two years traveling throughout Europe, Central Asia, and Africa, exploring the arts and studying the planning and design of cities and civilizations.

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North Carolina State University, Raleigh, NC
North Carolina State University, Raleigh, NC - Photo courtesy of North Carolina State University

Upon returning from his fellowship in 1953, he apprenticed in Fort Lauderdale, Florida, with Frederic Stresau, a landscape architect noted for his re铿乶ed aesthetics and extensive plant knowledge. Bell was hired to complement Stresau鈥檚 more naturalistic creations with a modernist approach to design. While there, Bell worked on a design for the parterre gardens for the Fontainebleau Hotel in Miami Beach, designed by architect Morris Lapidus. Stresau also placed great emphasis on the value of professional registration for landscape architects, something Bell took to heart and drew upon years later in North Carolina.

In 1955 Bell founded Godwin and Bell Landscape Architects with James A. Godwin in Raleigh, North Carolina. Much of their work focused on urban renewal and public housing, but Bell became increasingly disturbed by the outcomes of many urban-renewal projects and left the 铿乺m in 1961 to pursue contemporary design and to work with members of allied professions to advance the greater landscape industry. Bell鈥檚 new 铿乺m was anchored at Water Garden, the home and o铿僣e complex that he and his wife, Mary Jo Harris Bell, developed over fourteen years, beginning in 1956. Covering eleven acres, the modernist Water Garden was their residence and studio, but it also became an o铿僣e park and cultural arts center. Its mix of pines, hardwoods, and wetlands served as a laboratory for Bell to test plants and planting methods; he was among the 铿乺st in North Carolina to use native plants in residential landscapes. Water Garden also served as the testing grounds for the North Carolina Sedimentation and Erosion Control Law, established in 1973.

In a career that spanned more than 50 years, Bell completed more than 2,000 projects, from residences to public parks, university master plans, and island resorts. He worked on campus master plans for North Carolina State University, Meredith College, Peace College, Appalachian State University, Western Carolina University, Fayetteville State University, and St. Mary鈥檚 School in Raleigh. Among his most notable campus designs were the central plaza known as The Brickyard on the North Carolina State University campus and the McIver Amphitheater and Meredith Lake at Meredith College. He also designed the grounds and interior gardens of the North Carolina Legislative Building with architects Edward Durell Stone, Sr., and Holloway-Reeves; developed master plans for Pilot Mountain and Stone Mountain State Parks for the North Carolina State Parks Department; designed a master plan and site improvements for Raleigh鈥檚 historic Pullen Park; and developed master plans for Figure Eight Island and Hammocks Beach Island (now Hammock鈥檚 Beach State Park) on the North Carolina coast.

Bell led the creation of the North Carolina chapter of the American Society of Landscape Architects (ASLA), and in 1969, recalling Stresau鈥檚 philosophy, he was instrumental in establishing the landscape- architecture registration law in that state, becoming the 铿乺st appointee to the North Carolina Board of Landscape Architects. In 1990 Bell became a Fellow of the ASLA, and in that same year he was joined by his daughter Sharon and her husband, Dennis Glazener, to form Bell-Glazener Design Group. Among their important projects were the Raleigh Moore Square transit facility and parking deck and, what Bell considered to be one of his most notable achievements, work on Guilford College in Greensboro, North Carolina. To avert a plan to build a highway through the college鈥檚 campus, Bell designed an alternative 22-mile-long boulevard that is considered to be the only tra铿僣 corridor in North Carolina whose design, by a landscape architect, was primarily determined by environmental criteria. Bell鈥檚 passionate advocacy for environmentally sensitive site design and his collaboration with allied professionals have had a profound impact on the development of landscape architecture in North Carolina and the American South. In recognition of his exceptional career, he was awarded the ASLA Medal in 2014.

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McIver Amphitheater, Raleigh, NC
McIver Amphitheater, Raleigh, NC - Photo courtesy Meredith College, 2018