Klyde Warren Park, Dallas, TX. Photo courtesy of OJB Landscape Architecture.
What does it mean for a 21st-century city to be historic and modern at the same time?
How can decisions about planning, design, and stewardship balance the roles of natural and cultural resources?
How are new forms of patronage affecting the planning, design, and maintenance of the city’s public spaces?
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Although Dallas, Texas, is the ninth largest city in the United States, the number of residents in the Dallas-Fort Worth area increased more than in any other metropolitan area in the nation from 2017 to 2018, according to recent estimates from the U.S. Census Bureau. To explore the choices that will shape Dallas’ future, and to initiate and inspire broad community-based participation in decision-making, ¶À¼Ò±¬ÁÏ (¶À¼Ò±¬ÁÏ) will curate a one-day conference on Friday, October 4, 2019, in the Horchow Auditorium of the Dallas Museum of Art. Second Wave of Modernism IV: Making Space within Place will highlight the city’s leadership with projects that balance design with natural and cultural values and the imperative to deal with climate change. It will also showcase the city’s public-private initiatives and recent innovations in creative management and stewardship.
Introductory presentations (by Peter Walker, Peter Ker Walker, and James Burnett) will illuminate the role that landscape architects have played in laying the foundation for today’s planning and design work by exploring several iconic projects completed in the Dallas Arts District over the past 35 years. A morning panel, titled “Transforming the Downtown Core,” will examine four projects (by Field Operations, Hargreaves Associates, Ten Eyck Landscape Architects and SWA) that are currently in the design or construction phase in downtown Dallas, revealing how a public-private partnership was able to facilitate the development of these priority parks in the urban core. The afternoon panel, “Transforming and Connecting the City,” will be a forward-looking discussion of larger-scale projects currently underway (i.e., in the planning, design, or execution phase) that aim to balance, leverage, and steward both natural and cultural resources. The closing panel, featuring leaders in landscape architecture, planning, journalism, patronage, and stewardship, will reflect on the day’s presentations.Â
Making Space within Place is the fourth installment in an ongoing series of conferences about the Second Wave of Modernism. Earlier conferences on that theme were held at the University of Toronto (2015), New York’s Museum of Modern Art (2011), and the Chicago Architecture Foundation (2008).
6.25 LA CESâ„¢ professional development hours
6.25 hours of AIA Learning Units
Speakers
For the Friday Conference
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Charles A. Birnbaum
¶À¼Ò±¬ÁÏ -
Brent A. Brown
Trinity Park Conservancy -
Dustin Bullard
Downtown Dallas, Inc. -
James Burnett
OJB Landscape Architecture -
Isabel Castilla
James Corner Field Operations -
Robert W. Decherd
A. H. Belo Corporation -
Philip C. Henderson
The Loop Circuit Trail Conservancy -
Ken Haines
Hargreaves Associates -
Mark Lamster
Dallas Morning News -
Veletta Forsythe Lill
-
Chuck McDaniel
SWA -
Amy M. Meadows
Parks for Downtown Dallas -
Janette Monear
Texas Trees Foundation -
Christine E. Ten Eyck
Ten Eyck Landscape Architects -
Gail Thomas
Dallas Institute of Humanities and Culture -
Peter Ker Walker
(firm of) Peter Ker Walker -
Peter Walker
PWP Landscape Architecture -
Willis C. Winters
Dallas Parks and Recreation
Schedule at a Glance / Conference and Related Events
Opening Reception
Nasher Sculpture Center
Thursday | 6-8pm
Conference
Dallas Museum or Art
Friday | 8:30am-5pm
Tours and Mobile Workshops
Throughout Dallas
Saturday | 8:30am-1:30pm