Speakers

Charles A. Birnbaum, FASLA, FAAR
President & CEO, The Cultural Landscape Foundation


Charles BirnbaumCharles A. Birnbaum is the President & CEO, as well as founder, of The Cultural Landscape Foundation (TCLF). Prior to creating TCLF, Mr. Birnbaum spent 15 years as the coordinator of the National Park Service Historic Landscape Initiative (HLI) and a decade in private practice in New York City with a focus on landscape preservation and urban design. One of his major projects is the web-based initiative What’s Out There® (a searchable database of the nation’s designed landscape heritage). He has authored and edited numerous publications including the Modern Landscapes: Transition and Transformation series (Princeton Architectural Press, Volumes printed in 2012 and 2014), Shaping the American Landscape (UVA Press, 2009), Design with Culture: Claiming America’s Landscape Heritage (UVA Press 2005), Preserving Modern Landscape Architecture (1999) and its follow-up publication, Making Post-War Landscapes Visible (2004, both for Spacemaker Press), Pioneers of American Landscape Design (McGraw Hill 2000) and The Guidelines for the Treatment of Cultural Landscapes (National Park Service, 1996). In 1995, the American Society of Landscape Architects (ASLA) awarded the HLI the President's Award of Excellence and in 1996 inducted Birnbaum as a Fellow of the ASLA. He served as a Loeb Fellow at Harvard’s Graduate School of Design during which time he founded TCLF. In 2004, Mr. Birnbaum was awarded the Rome Prize in Historic Preservation and Conservation and spent spring/summer of that year at the American Academy in Rome. In 2008, he was the visiting Glimcher Distinguished Professor at Ohio State’s Austin E. Knowlton School of Architecture. That same year the ASLA awarded him the Alfred B. LaGasse Medal and in 2009 the President’s Medal. Mr. Birnbaum has been a visiting professor at the Columbia University Graduate School of Architecture Planning + Preservation and a frequent contributor to The Huffington Post.

 

Details of De Menil campus. Image courtesy of the Architectural Archives of the University of Pennsylvania