Raleigh skyline from Dorothea Dix Park. Courtesy City of Raleigh
How should planning in the New South involve more than removing old monuments?
How does this region’s rich and complicated layering of natural history and culture inform present-day planning and design?
How do campus landscapes become importers and exporters for design and management innovation and excellence?
Online registration has closed.
On-site registration available at the Hunt Library on Friday, April 13.
North Carolina’s Research Triangle—including Raleigh, Durham, and Chapel Hill—is a rich tapestry of natural and cultural systems interwoven with campus landscapes (academic, corporate, and cultural), regional and urban parks, and residential communities that serve diverse populations. Although the idea of the ‘Research Triangle’ first began to form in the post-War era, the region’s history dates back centuries and includes periods of great achievement despite generations of racial strife. Now, in the first quarter of the 21st century, Raleigh, the state capital, and the neighboring cities of Durham and Chapel Hill are embracing their roles as incubators for fresh ideas in planning, design, and stewardship, with landscape architects often taking the lead.
To explore the choices that will shape the region’s future and to initiate and inspire broad community-based participation, The Cultural Landscape Foundation (TCLF) has curated a one-day summit to be held on Friday, April 13, 2018, in the auditorium at the James B. Hunt, Jr., Library at North Carolina State University, in Raleigh. The summit will draw attention to local and regional work that represents the best planning and design initiatives that strike a balance with natural, historic, cultural, and ecological systems. The summit is supported by Premier Sponsors, Sasaki and the Dix Park Conservancy; and Event Partners, the City of Raleigh, the North Carolina Museum of Art, and North Carolina State University’s College of Design.
Introductory presentations will explore the regionally unique coupling of human and natural systems. A morning panel of international practitioners will then reveal how the area’s campus landscapes are serving as “incubators” for innovative planning and design solutions. The afternoon panel will showcase new projects that are re-evaluating the region’s monuments and memorials, as well as two revered public landscapes—Moore Square and Dix Park. A moderated closing panel, featuring Raleigh’s former chief planner, a nationally prominent design critic, and a leading advocate for the region’s cultural landscapes, will discuss and assess the day’s proceedings.
Available to paid registrants:
6.5 LA CES™ professional development hours
6.5 hours of AIA Learning Units
Schedule at a Glance / Conference and Related Events
Opening Reception
North Carolina Museum of Art, Raleigh
Thursday | 6-8pm
Conference
NC State University, Raleigh
Friday | 8:30am-5pm
What’s Out There® Weekend Tours
Raleigh-Durham-Chapel Hill
Sat-Sun | 10am-5pm