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Landscape Institute

The Landscape Institute (LI) is a UK based professional body for the landscape profession. Its membership includes landscape architects, urban designers, landscape planners, landscape scientists and landscape managers. The LI also has a category for academic members.

The landscape profession was inspired by the classical world. Stourhead
Landscape Institute
AbbreviationLI
Formation1929; 94 years ago (1929)
TypeProfessional body
PurposePromoting the activities and profession of landscape architecture in the United Kingdom and elsewhere
HeadquartersLondon, W1T
United Kingdom
Region served
UK
Membership
c. 5,600 landscape architects
President
-
Main organ
LI Board of Trustees
WebsiteLandscape Institute LI
The landscape park at Blenheim Palace was designed by Capability Brown. Though often described as 'Britain's most famous landscape architect' Brown was born two centuries before the formation of what is now the UK Landscape Institute and one century before the invention of the term 'landscape architecture'
The 1951 of Britain was one of first prestige public projects on which British landscape architects were engaged

Founded in 1929-30 as the Institute of Landscape Architects (ILA), it was granted a royal charter in 1997. In the words of its longest serving president, Geoffrey Jellicoe, “It is only in the present century that the collective landscape has emerged as a social necessity. We are promoting a landscape art on a scale never conceived of in history.” [1]

The LI seeks to promote landscape architecture and to regulate the landscape profession with a code of conduct that members must abide by. The LI had ‘over 900’ members at the time of its fortieth birthday (in 1969) and by 1978 had over 1,500 members.[2] In 2019 the total membership of the LI was 5,613.[3] The Landscape Institute royal charter was granted in 1997 and revised in 2008 and 2016. Its objects and purposes are specified as follows (in Clause 5. (1): ‘The objects and purposes for which the Institute is hereby constituted are to protect, conserve and enhance the natural and built environment for the benefit of the public by promoting the arts and sciences of Landscape Architecture (as such expression is hereinafter defined) and its several applications and for that purpose to foster and encourage the dissemination of knowledge relating to Landscape Architecture and the promotion of research and education therein, and in particular to establish, uphold and advance the standards of education, qualification, competence and conduct of those who practice Landscape Architecture as a profession, and to determine standards and criteria for education, training and experience.’ [4]

The Landscape Institute publishes the journal Landscape[5] (formerly Landscape Design), and is a member of the International Federation of Landscape Architects.[6]

Development of the landscape profession in the UK

 
After many years as a car park (for civil servants) Horse Guards Parade was restored by landscape architect Hal Moggridge as a parade ground and civic square

The growth of landscape architecture has been led by its membership and supported by its secretariat and by government legislation since the 1940s, The relevant legislation included the New Towns Act (1946) which led to a requirement for special attention to the ‘landscape treatment’ of New Towns, and thus to the first salaried jobs for landscape architects in the public service. The European Environmental Impact Assessment Directive EIA Directive (85/337/EEC) (1985) led new jobs in preparing environmental impact assessments.

From the 1950s to the 1980s, the public sector (particularly local authorities) was the largest employer of landscape architects, with a minority working in private practice. In the 21st century, and especially following public spending reforms post-2009, a greater majority of landscape architects are employed in the private sector.

History of the term ‘landscape architecture’

 
Geoffrey Jellicoe lived in Grove Terrace, Highgate, London

‘Landscape architecture’ is a modern name for an ancient art. The development of the ancient art is analysed by Geoffrey Jellicoe, in The Landscape of Man, and by Norman T. Newton in Design on the land. Jellicoe describes the cave paintings of Lascaux c30,000 BC as the ‘First Landscapes consciously conceived by man’.[7] Newton, defines ‘landscape architecture’ as the art ‘of arranging land, together with the spaces and objects upon it, for safe, efficient, healthful, pleasant human use’ and writes that ‘the ancient art became a new profession officially, when in 1863 the title Landscape Architect was first used by the state-appointed Board of Central Park Commissioners in New York City. It had been employed unofficially by Frederick Law Olmsted and Calvert Vaux beginning in 1858’.[8]

Though its use as a professional title is American, the origin of the term ‘landscape architect’ is European. Charles Waldheim identifies two possible nineteenth century origins: in France and in the UK.[9] The possible French origin comes from Jean-Marie Morel. He was an ‘architect, engineer, and garden designer’ and he ‘is credited with the formulation ‘’architecte-paysagiste’’’. This possibility was identified in the late nineteenth century [10] and researched by Disponzio.[11]

The possible UK origin was identified in 1982[12] and researched by Nina Antonetti in 2012.[13] She traces the term ‘landscape architecture’ to Meason and its use as professional title to William Andrews Nesfield. Meason's book was published in 1828 and deals with the relationship between buildings and their settings. John Claudius Loudon welcomed the new term 'landscape architect' and used it in the Gardeners Magazine, which he edited, and in two of the encyclopedias he published: the Encyclopedia of Gardening (from the 1835 edition onwards) [14] and the Encyclopedia of Cottage, Farm, Villa Architecture (1838).[15] Loudon also used it in the title of his 1840 book: The landscape gardening and landscape architecture of the late Humphry Repton, esq. The publicity given to the term ‘landscape architecture’ by Loudon led to use of the term ‘landscape architect’ by some British garden designers from the mid-nineteenth century onwards. The most notable example is its use in1849 by William Andrews Nesfield. Nesfield described himself as a landscape architect on the plan he submitted for the garden of Britain's most famous residence, Buckingham Palace.[16][17]

UK use of the term ‘landscape architect’ (to mean ‘garden designer’) tailed off towards the end of the nineteenth century. It was Olmsted's long and brilliant career that led to it becoming famous and being associated with public projects: for parks, greenways, open space systems and urban design. His most famous projects were Central Park in New York and the Emerald Necklace of green space in Boston. This was the sense in which ‘landscape architecture’ returned to the UK and in which it was adopted by the Landscape Institute, as described below.

History of the ILA and LI

 
The professional career of Thomas Mawson, who became the first President of the Institute of Landscape Architects, began with garden design, moved to public parks and extended to civic design
 

Discussion of the need for landscape architecture to have a professional body in the UK began with a 1911 article on ‘’The Position and Prospects for Landscape Architecture in England’’.[18] It was written by Thomas Mawson and argued for the creation of a Society of Landscape Architects. When working on the Dunfermline Competition for Pittencrieff Park, Thomas Mawson and Patrick Geddes had been the first two men to use the term ‘landscape architect’ in the sense established by Frederick Law Olmsted's office. Mawson's article contributed to the formation of a new body but there was a disagreement about what name it should have. It came to be called the Town Planning Institute (TPI) and is now the Royal Town Planning Institute (RTPI). Mawson became its president in 1923.

Stanley V Hart was concerned at the lack of unity in the British section of the International Exhibition of Garden Design (held in October 1928) and used an advertisement in The Gardeners' Chronicle to invite interested parties to attend a meeting at the Chelsea Flower Show in 1929. According to Brenda Colvin (who was present) the original intention was to call it the ‘British Association of Garden Architects’. She told Tony Aldous, who was commissioned by the LI to write a book on its history, that ‘Most of the people who started the institute were only doing private gardens, you must remember’. So ‘If we had called it Landscape Gardeners, it would have taken us much longer to arrive at the full scope the profession has today - if we had arrived at all’. She also told Aldous that ‘Thomas Adams persuaded the founding members to follow the American lead and for ‘Landscape Architects’ [19] The decision to change its name to the Institute of Landscape Architects (ILA) was taken in 1930 and the new institute was launched. The Objects of the ILA were defined in Clause 2 of its first Constitution (drafted by Gilbert Henry Jenkins): ‘The Institute shall be formed to promote the study and general advancement of the Art of Landscape Architecture in all its branches, and to serve as a medium of friendly intercourse between the members and others practising or interested in the Art’. In Clause 3, ten Methods of Achievement were set out: Establish suitable headquarters; Arrange lectures; Prepare sets of lantern slides; Promote the publication of a Journal; Arrange periodical exhibitions; Found a Library; Educate the public in the Art of Landscape Architecture; Secure the establishment of one or more Training Centres; Organise visits to good examples of Landscape Architecture; Hold Conferences with other Societies who can assist in promoting the Art of Landscape Architecture. The journal of the new institute had the title Landscape and garden and was edited by a well-known garden designer and author: Richard Sudell.[20]

The early membership of the ILA was mostly garden designers and architects. Some of the garden designers (including Stanley Hart[21]) left because of the restriction that members of the new institute must not earn money from trade. Inspired by the practice of the Royal Institute of British Architects members had to declare that ‘I am not engaged in the sale of anything connected with gardening, nor am I financially interested in any commercial gardening undertaking’ [22] The focus of the ILA began to expand beyond gardening when Thomas Adams became its president in 1937. He had been the first president of the Town Planning Institute (in 1914) and had extensive experience of planning and landscape architecture in the US and Canada. The broadening of the workload accelerated when Geoffrey Jellicoe became president of the ILA in 1939. He visited the US in 1942 and, like Adams, was impressed by the range of work undertaken by members of the American Society of Landscape Architects (ASLA). Richard Sudell supported the broadening of the workload. In 1948 Jellicoe became the founding president of the International Federation of Landscape Architects (IFLA). To my mind, the expansion to include public projects was obviously right - but turning away from garden design was obviously wrong. It was like excluding poetry from a course on English literature.

But the expansion was a success and the fruits of the ILA's promotion of landscape architecture are detailed in the chapters of Tony Aldous’ Chapter 3: public clients; Chapter 4 new towns; Chapter 5 university campuses; Chapter 6; Whitehall; Chapter 7: roads; Chapter 8: power, steel, rail, canals and airports; Chapter 9: forestry and reservoirs; Chapter 10: local authorities; Chapter 11: mineral extraction; Chapter 12: corporate clients.[23]

In 1977, the Institute of Landscape Architects changed its name to the Landscape Institute and expanded its membership to include landscape managers and landscape scientists, as well as the landscape architects who remain the largest specialism. The collective name for the various specialists is ‘landscape professionals’.

 
Cover of the Journal of the Institute of Landscape Architects (JILA) for March 1955. The ILA logo was designed by Colin Gill (a cousin of Eric Gill)

Membership

LI members include landscape designers, landscape managers, landscape planners, landscape scientists and urban designers.[24]

The Affiliate membership category is an open category with minimal requirements. To become a professional member, however, candidates must first have completed an LI-accredited university course or alternatively be assessed as a special case for admission as an Associate. Following this they proceed along the Pathway to Chartership (P2C), a mentored and supervised programme of learning which culminates in an interview with two examiners who are senior members of the profession, once the candidate has attained an agreed level of competency. This process was formerly known as 'Part IV' of the Landscape Institute's own design examination. Parts I to III were replaced by the system of accredited degree courses in the mid-1980s.

‘Landscape Architect’ is not a protected title in the UK (unlike the title ‘architect’ there is no state register). However, it is a regulated profession and the UK Government recognises the Landscape Institute as the regulating body . It would therefore be fraudulent to use the title 'Chartered Member of the Landscape Institute' and the designation 'CMLI' if one was not a chartered member.

Activities

The activities of the LI include maintaining a membership database, member communications, newsletters, the Journal, CPD, professional examinations, enforcing a Code of Conduct, policy and technical outputs, and advocacy. The LI's publications include: Guidance for Landscape and Visual Impact Assessment 3rd Ed. (jointly with IEMA), Visualisation of Development, and BIM for Landscape. In 2008, the LI, supported by CABE, launched a campaign to increase the number of Landscape Architects in the UK. Entitled I want to be a Landscape Architect, it focused on increasing the number of postgraduate and undergraduate students taking LI accredited courses.

In July 2018, the I want to be a Landscape Architect initiative was replaced by a new careers campaign entitled #ChooseLandscape, which aimed to raise awareness of landscape as a profession; improve and increase access to landscape education; and inspire young people to choose landscape as a career.[25] This campaign included other landscape-related professions such as landscape management, landscape planning, landscape science and urban design.[26]

The LI was one of the steering group partners of Neighbourhoods Green, a partnership initiative which worked with social landlords and housing associations to highlight the importance of, and raise the overall quality of design and management for, open and green space in social housing. It is also represented on the Board of The Parks Alliance [27] and Building with Nature [28] and has Memoranda of Understanding with the Institute of Place Management (IPM)[29] and Landscapes for Life (the National Association for Areas of Outstanding Natural Beauty NAAOB).[30]

Library and archive

 
The Landscape Institute's Library and Archive is housed at the Museum of English Rural Life in Reading

The Institute of Landscape Architects (the Landscape Institute's previous name), built up a collection of library books and archives relating to the practice of design and management with the purpose of creating a national landscape collection. The library was formally established in 1967. The archive collections began in the 1990s as landscape architects died and their collections were bequeathed, donated, or actively collected by the institute. In 2013, the Landscape Institute Archive and Library was gifted to the Museum of English Rural Life (MERL) at the University of Reading and is available to Institute members, researchers and members of the public.[31] It receives financial support from the Landscape Institute.

Presidents

Presidents of the Landscape Institute are elected by LI members for a two-year term. Past presidents of the Institute of Landscape Architects/Landscape Institute

  • 2022-24 -
  • 2020-22 Jane Findlay
  • 2018-20 Adam White
  • 2016-18 Merrick Denton-Thompson
  • 2014-16 Noel Farrer
  • 2012-14 Sue Illman
  • 2010-12 Jo Watkins
  • 2008-10 Neil Williamson
  • 2006-08 Nigel Thorne
  • 2004-06 Kathryn Moore
  • 2002-04 Rod Edwards
  • 2000-02 David Jarvis
  • 1999-2000 Tim Gale
  • 1997-99 Richard Burden
  • 1995-97 Alan Tate
  • 1993-95 Michael Ellison
  • 1991-93 Hugh Clamp
  • 1989-91 Andrew Bannister
  • 1987-89 Cedric Lisney
  • 1985-87 John Whalley
  • 1983-85 David Randall
  • 1981-83 Brian Clouston
  • 1979-81 Hal Moggridge
  • 1977-79 Arnold Weddle
  • 1975-77 William Gillespie
  • 1973-75 Cliff Tandy
  • 1971-73 Derek Lovejoy
  • 1971 Cliff Tandy
  • 1969-71 John St Bodfan Gruffydd
  • 1967-69 Brian Hackett
  • 1965-67 Peter Shepheard
  • 1963-65 Leslie Milner-White
  • 1961-63 Peter Youngman
  • 1959-61 Frank Clark
  • 1957-59 Sylvia Crowe
  • 1955-57 Richard Sudell
  • 1953-55 James Adams
  • 1951-53 Brenda Colvin
  • 1949-51 Thomas Sharp
  • 1939-49 Geoffrey Jellicoe
  • 1937-39 Thomas Adams
  • 1935-37 Gilbert Jenkins
  • 1930-31 Edward Prentice-Mawson
  • 1931-33 Edward White
  • 1930-31 Thomas Mawson

See also

References

  1. ^ Jellicoe, Geoffrey and Susan (1975). The Landscape of Man. Thames and Hudson. p. Book Jacket. ISBN 0500340617.
  2. ^ Aldous, T., with Clouston, B., Landscape by design. Wm Heinemann Ltd., 1979 ISBN 0-434-01805-8 p. 128
  3. ^ Landscape Institute Performance Report 2018/2019 (in members section of Landscape Institute website)
  4. ^ "Governing documents". Landscape Institute UK. LI. Retrieved 2 November 2020.
  5. ^ "Journal Issue | Landscape Institute". Retrieved 2019-01-31.
  6. ^ "Landscape Institute · IFLA World". Retrieved 2019-01-31.
  7. ^ Jellicoe, Geoffrey and Susan (1975). Landscape of Man. Thames & Hudson. p. 14. ISBN 0500340617.
  8. ^ Newton, Norman, T. (1971). Design on the land: the development of landscape architecture. Belknap Press. p. xxi. ISBN 0674198700.
  9. ^ Waldheim, Charles (2014). "Introduction: landscape as architecture". Studies in the History of Gardens & Designed Landscapes. 187–191 (34:3).
  10. ^ Hunt, John Dixon; Conan, Michel; Goldstein, Claire (2002). Tradition and innovation in French garden art : chapters of a new history. Philadelphia: University of Pennsylvania Press. p. 154. ISBN 0812236343.
  11. ^ Waldheim, Charles (2014). "Introduction: landscape as architecture". Studies in the History of Gardens & Designed Landscapes. 187–191 (34:3).
  12. ^ Turner, T.H.D. (1982). "Scottish Origins of ' Landscape Architecture". Landscape Architecture. 52–55 (72:3).
  13. ^ Antonetti, Nina (2012). "William Andrews Nesfield and the origins of the landscape architect". Landscape History. 33 (33:1): 69–86. doi:10.1080/01433768.2012.671037. S2CID 161055802.
  14. ^ Loudon, John Claudius (1835). An encyclopædia of gardening : comprising the theory and practice of horticulture, floriculture, arboriculture and landscape gardening : including all the latest improvements ; a general history of gardening in all countries ; and a statistical view of its present state ; with suggestions for its future progress, in the British isles. Longman, Rees, Orme, Brown, Green. p. 128. ISBN 0434018058.
  15. ^ Loudon, John Claudius (1835). An Encyclopædia of Cottage, Farm, and Villa Architecture and Furniture; containing numerous designs for dwellings, from the cottage to the villa ... each design accompanied by analytical and critical remarks. Longman, Rees, Orme, Brown, Green & Longman.
  16. ^ Antonetti, Nina (2012). "William Andrews Nesfield and the origins of the landscape architect". Landscape History. 33 (33:1): 69–86. doi:10.1080/01433768.2012.671037. S2CID 161055802.
  17. ^ "The origins of landscape architecture a professional title and an art". Landscape Architects Association. LAA.
  18. ^ Mawson, Thomas, H. (1911). "The Position and Prospects of Landscape Architecture in England". The Town Planning Review. 225–229 (2:3).
  19. ^ Aldous, Tony (1979). Landscape by design. Heinemann. pp. 120–29. ISBN 0434018058.
  20. ^ Downs, Annabel (2008). "Richard Sudell". Oxford Dictionary of National Biography (online ed.). Oxford University Press. doi:10.1093/ref:odnb/96803. ISBN 978-0-19-861412-8. (Subscription or UK public library membership required.)
  21. ^ ILA ‘’Quarterly Notes’’ No.6 1932
  22. ^ Aldous, Tony (1979). Landscape by design. Heinemann. pp. 120–29. ISBN 0434018058.
  23. ^ Aldous, Tony (1979). Landscape by design. Heinemann. ISBN 0434018058.
  24. ^ "Join the LI | Landscape Institute Members". Retrieved 2019-01-31.
  25. ^ Gosling, Ben. "#ChooseLandscape launches next month – here's how to get involved | Landscape Institute". Retrieved 2019-01-31.
  26. ^ "Choose Your Career – Chooselandscape". Retrieved 2019-01-31.
  27. ^ "The Parks Alliance".
  28. ^ "Building with Nature". Building with Nature.
  29. ^ "Place Management". Place Management.
  30. ^ "Landscapes for Life". Landscapes for Life.
  31. ^ "MERL". www.reading.ac.uk/merl/collections/Archives_A_to_Z/merl-SR_LI.aspx/. Retrieved 2020-09-03.

External links

  • ChooseLandscape website
  • Landscape Institute (website official)
  • IFLA International Federation of Landscape Architects website
  • Landscape Institute LI: history and future

landscape, institute, based, professional, body, landscape, profession, membership, includes, landscape, architects, urban, designers, landscape, planners, landscape, scientists, landscape, managers, also, category, academic, members, landscape, profession, in. The Landscape Institute LI is a UK based professional body for the landscape profession Its membership includes landscape architects urban designers landscape planners landscape scientists and landscape managers The LI also has a category for academic members The landscape profession was inspired by the classical world Stourhead Landscape InstituteAbbreviationLIFormation1929 94 years ago 1929 TypeProfessional bodyPurposePromoting the activities and profession of landscape architecture in the United Kingdom and elsewhereHeadquartersLondon W1TUnited KingdomRegion servedUKMembershipc 5 600 landscape architectsPresident Main organLI Board of TrusteesWebsiteLandscape Institute LIThe landscape park at Blenheim Palace was designed by Capability Brown Though often described as Britain s most famous landscape architect Brown was born two centuries before the formation of what is now the UK Landscape Institute and one century before the invention of the term landscape architecture The 1951 of Britain was one of first prestige public projects on which British landscape architects were engaged Founded in 1929 30 as the Institute of Landscape Architects ILA it was granted a royal charter in 1997 In the words of its longest serving president Geoffrey Jellicoe It is only in the present century that the collective landscape has emerged as a social necessity We are promoting a landscape art on a scale never conceived of in history 1 The LI seeks to promote landscape architecture and to regulate the landscape profession with a code of conduct that members must abide by The LI had over 900 members at the time of its fortieth birthday in 1969 and by 1978 had over 1 500 members 2 In 2019 the total membership of the LI was 5 613 3 The Landscape Institute royal charter was granted in 1997 and revised in 2008 and 2016 Its objects and purposes are specified as follows in Clause 5 1 The objects and purposes for which the Institute is hereby constituted are to protect conserve and enhance the natural and built environment for the benefit of the public by promoting the arts and sciences of Landscape Architecture as such expression is hereinafter defined and its several applications and for that purpose to foster and encourage the dissemination of knowledge relating to Landscape Architecture and the promotion of research and education therein and in particular to establish uphold and advance the standards of education qualification competence and conduct of those who practice Landscape Architecture as a profession and to determine standards and criteria for education training and experience 4 The Landscape Institute publishes the journal Landscape 5 formerly Landscape Design and is a member of the International Federation of Landscape Architects 6 Contents 1 Development of the landscape profession in the UK 1 1 History of the term landscape architecture 1 2 History of the ILA and LI 2 Membership 3 Activities 4 Library and archive 5 Presidents 6 See also 7 References 8 External linksDevelopment of the landscape profession in the UK Edit After many years as a car park for civil servants Horse Guards Parade was restored by landscape architect Hal Moggridge as a parade ground and civic squareThe growth of landscape architecture has been led by its membership and supported by its secretariat and by government legislation since the 1940s The relevant legislation included the New Towns Act 1946 which led to a requirement for special attention to the landscape treatment of New Towns and thus to the first salaried jobs for landscape architects in the public service The European Environmental Impact Assessment Directive EIA Directive 85 337 EEC 1985 led new jobs in preparing environmental impact assessments From the 1950s to the 1980s the public sector particularly local authorities was the largest employer of landscape architects with a minority working in private practice In the 21st century and especially following public spending reforms post 2009 a greater majority of landscape architects are employed in the private sector History of the term landscape architecture Edit Geoffrey Jellicoe lived in Grove Terrace Highgate London Landscape architecture is a modern name for an ancient art The development of the ancient art is analysed by Geoffrey Jellicoe in The Landscape of Man and by Norman T Newton in Design on the land Jellicoe describes the cave paintings of Lascaux c30 000 BC as the First Landscapes consciously conceived by man 7 Newton defines landscape architecture as the art of arranging land together with the spaces and objects upon it for safe efficient healthful pleasant human use and writes that the ancient art became a new profession officially when in 1863 the title Landscape Architect was first used by the state appointed Board of Central Park Commissioners in New York City It had been employed unofficially by Frederick Law Olmsted and Calvert Vaux beginning in 1858 8 Though its use as a professional title is American the origin of the term landscape architect is European Charles Waldheim identifies two possible nineteenth century origins in France and in the UK 9 The possible French origin comes from Jean Marie Morel He was an architect engineer and garden designer and he is credited with the formulation architecte paysagiste This possibility was identified in the late nineteenth century 10 and researched by Disponzio 11 The possible UK origin was identified in 1982 12 and researched by Nina Antonetti in 2012 13 She traces the term landscape architecture to Meason and its use as professional title to William Andrews Nesfield Meason s book was published in 1828 and deals with the relationship between buildings and their settings John Claudius Loudon welcomed the new term landscape architect and used it in the Gardeners Magazine which he edited and in two of the encyclopedias he published the Encyclopedia of Gardening from the 1835 edition onwards 14 and the Encyclopedia of Cottage Farm Villa Architecture 1838 15 Loudon also used it in the title of his 1840 book The landscape gardening and landscape architecture of the late Humphry Repton esq The publicity given to the term landscape architecture by Loudon led to use of the term landscape architect by some British garden designers from the mid nineteenth century onwards The most notable example is its use in1849 by William Andrews Nesfield Nesfield described himself as a landscape architect on the plan he submitted for the garden of Britain s most famous residence Buckingham Palace 16 17 UK use of the term landscape architect to mean garden designer tailed off towards the end of the nineteenth century It was Olmsted s long and brilliant career that led to it becoming famous and being associated with public projects for parks greenways open space systems and urban design His most famous projects were Central Park in New York and the Emerald Necklace of green space in Boston This was the sense in which landscape architecture returned to the UK and in which it was adopted by the Landscape Institute as described below History of the ILA and LI Edit The professional career of Thomas Mawson who became the first President of the Institute of Landscape Architects began with garden design moved to public parks and extended to civic design Discussion of the need for landscape architecture to have a professional body in the UK began with a 1911 article on The Position and Prospects for Landscape Architecture in England 18 It was written by Thomas Mawson and argued for the creation of a Society of Landscape Architects When working on the Dunfermline Competition for Pittencrieff Park Thomas Mawson and Patrick Geddes had been the first two men to use the term landscape architect in the sense established by Frederick Law Olmsted s office Mawson s article contributed to the formation of a new body but there was a disagreement about what name it should have It came to be called the Town Planning Institute TPI and is now the Royal Town Planning Institute RTPI Mawson became its president in 1923 Stanley V Hart was concerned at the lack of unity in the British section of the International Exhibition of Garden Design held in October 1928 and used an advertisement in The Gardeners Chronicle to invite interested parties to attend a meeting at the Chelsea Flower Show in 1929 According to Brenda Colvin who was present the original intention was to call it the British Association of Garden Architects She told Tony Aldous who was commissioned by the LI to write a book on its history that Most of the people who started the institute were only doing private gardens you must remember So If we had called it Landscape Gardeners it would have taken us much longer to arrive at the full scope the profession has today if we had arrived at all She also told Aldous that Thomas Adams persuaded the founding members to follow the American lead and for Landscape Architects 19 The decision to change its name to the Institute of Landscape Architects ILA was taken in 1930 and the new institute was launched The Objects of the ILA were defined in Clause 2 of its first Constitution drafted by Gilbert Henry Jenkins The Institute shall be formed to promote the study and general advancement of the Art of Landscape Architecture in all its branches and to serve as a medium of friendly intercourse between the members and others practising or interested in the Art In Clause 3 ten Methods of Achievement were set out Establish suitable headquarters Arrange lectures Prepare sets of lantern slides Promote the publication of a Journal Arrange periodical exhibitions Found a Library Educate the public in the Art of Landscape Architecture Secure the establishment of one or more Training Centres Organise visits to good examples of Landscape Architecture Hold Conferences with other Societies who can assist in promoting the Art of Landscape Architecture The journal of the new institute had the title Landscape and garden and was edited by a well known garden designer and author Richard Sudell 20 The early membership of the ILA was mostly garden designers and architects Some of the garden designers including Stanley Hart 21 left because of the restriction that members of the new institute must not earn money from trade Inspired by the practice of the Royal Institute of British Architects members had to declare that I am not engaged in the sale of anything connected with gardening nor am I financially interested in any commercial gardening undertaking 22 The focus of the ILA began to expand beyond gardening when Thomas Adams became its president in 1937 He had been the first president of the Town Planning Institute in 1914 and had extensive experience of planning and landscape architecture in the US and Canada The broadening of the workload accelerated when Geoffrey Jellicoe became president of the ILA in 1939 He visited the US in 1942 and like Adams was impressed by the range of work undertaken by members of the American Society of Landscape Architects ASLA Richard Sudell supported the broadening of the workload In 1948 Jellicoe became the founding president of the International Federation of Landscape Architects IFLA To my mind the expansion to include public projects was obviously right but turning away from garden design was obviously wrong It was like excluding poetry from a course on English literature But the expansion was a success and the fruits of the ILA s promotion of landscape architecture are detailed in the chapters of Tony Aldous Chapter 3 public clients Chapter 4 new towns Chapter 5 university campuses Chapter 6 Whitehall Chapter 7 roads Chapter 8 power steel rail canals and airports Chapter 9 forestry and reservoirs Chapter 10 local authorities Chapter 11 mineral extraction Chapter 12 corporate clients 23 In 1977 the Institute of Landscape Architects changed its name to the Landscape Institute and expanded its membership to include landscape managers and landscape scientists as well as the landscape architects who remain the largest specialism The collective name for the various specialists is landscape professionals Cover of the Journal of the Institute of Landscape Architects JILA for March 1955 The ILA logo was designed by Colin Gill a cousin of Eric Gill Membership EditLI members include landscape designers landscape managers landscape planners landscape scientists and urban designers 24 The Affiliate membership category is an open category with minimal requirements To become a professional member however candidates must first have completed an LI accredited university course or alternatively be assessed as a special case for admission as an Associate Following this they proceed along the Pathway to Chartership P2C a mentored and supervised programme of learning which culminates in an interview with two examiners who are senior members of the profession once the candidate has attained an agreed level of competency This process was formerly known as Part IV of the Landscape Institute s own design examination Parts I to III were replaced by the system of accredited degree courses in the mid 1980s Landscape Architect is not a protected title in the UK unlike the title architect there is no state register However it is a regulated profession and the UK Government recognises the Landscape Institute as the regulating body It would therefore be fraudulent to use the title Chartered Member of the Landscape Institute and the designation CMLI if one was not a chartered member Activities EditThe activities of the LI include maintaining a membership database member communications newsletters the Journal CPD professional examinations enforcing a Code of Conduct policy and technical outputs and advocacy The LI s publications include Guidance for Landscape and Visual Impact Assessment 3rd Ed jointly with IEMA Visualisation of Development and BIM for Landscape In 2008 the LI supported by CABE launched a campaign to increase the number of Landscape Architects in the UK Entitled I want to be a Landscape Architect it focused on increasing the number of postgraduate and undergraduate students taking LI accredited courses In July 2018 the I want to be a Landscape Architect initiative was replaced by a new careers campaign entitled ChooseLandscape which aimed to raise awareness of landscape as a profession improve and increase access to landscape education and inspire young people to choose landscape as a career 25 This campaign included other landscape related professions such as landscape management landscape planning landscape science and urban design 26 The LI was one of the steering group partners of Neighbourhoods Green a partnership initiative which worked with social landlords and housing associations to highlight the importance of and raise the overall quality of design and management for open and green space in social housing It is also represented on the Board of The Parks Alliance 27 and Building with Nature 28 and has Memoranda of Understanding with the Institute of Place Management IPM 29 and Landscapes for Life the National Association for Areas of Outstanding Natural Beauty NAAOB 30 Library and archive Edit The Landscape Institute s Library and Archive is housed at the Museum of English Rural Life in ReadingThe Institute of Landscape Architects the Landscape Institute s previous name built up a collection of library books and archives relating to the practice of design and management with the purpose of creating a national landscape collection The library was formally established in 1967 The archive collections began in the 1990s as landscape architects died and their collections were bequeathed donated or actively collected by the institute In 2013 the Landscape Institute Archive and Library was gifted to the Museum of English Rural Life MERL at the University of Reading and is available to Institute members researchers and members of the public 31 It receives financial support from the Landscape Institute Presidents EditPresidents of the Landscape Institute are elected by LI members for a two year term Past presidents of the Institute of Landscape Architects Landscape Institute 2022 24 2020 22 Jane Findlay 2018 20 Adam White 2016 18 Merrick Denton Thompson 2014 16 Noel Farrer 2012 14 Sue Illman 2010 12 Jo Watkins 2008 10 Neil Williamson 2006 08 Nigel Thorne 2004 06 Kathryn Moore 2002 04 Rod Edwards 2000 02 David Jarvis 1999 2000 Tim Gale 1997 99 Richard Burden 1995 97 Alan Tate 1993 95 Michael Ellison 1991 93 Hugh Clamp 1989 91 Andrew Bannister 1987 89 Cedric Lisney 1985 87 John Whalley 1983 85 David Randall 1981 83 Brian Clouston 1979 81 Hal Moggridge 1977 79 Arnold Weddle 1975 77 William Gillespie 1973 75 Cliff Tandy 1971 73 Derek Lovejoy 1971 Cliff Tandy 1969 71 John St Bodfan Gruffydd 1967 69 Brian Hackett 1965 67 Peter Shepheard 1963 65 Leslie Milner White 1961 63 Peter Youngman 1959 61 Frank Clark 1957 59 Sylvia Crowe 1955 57 Richard Sudell 1953 55 James Adams 1951 53 Brenda Colvin 1949 51 Thomas Sharp 1939 49 Geoffrey Jellicoe 1937 39 Thomas Adams 1935 37 Gilbert Jenkins 1930 31 Edward Prentice Mawson 1931 33 Edward White 1930 31 Thomas MawsonSee also EditLandscape architecture History of landscape architecture Landscape urbanism Landscape planning Schools of landscape architecture Construction Industry Council Environmental impact assessment English landscape garden Garden design History of gardening Geoffrey JellicoeReferences Edit Jellicoe Geoffrey and Susan 1975 The Landscape of Man Thames and Hudson p Book Jacket ISBN 0500340617 Aldous T with Clouston B Landscape by design Wm Heinemann Ltd 1979 ISBN 0 434 01805 8 p 128 Landscape Institute Performance Report 2018 2019 in members section of Landscape Institute website Governing documents Landscape Institute UK LI Retrieved 2 November 2020 Journal Issue Landscape Institute Retrieved 2019 01 31 Landscape Institute IFLA World Retrieved 2019 01 31 Jellicoe Geoffrey and Susan 1975 Landscape of Man Thames amp Hudson p 14 ISBN 0500340617 Newton Norman T 1971 Design on the land the development of landscape architecture Belknap Press p xxi ISBN 0674198700 Waldheim Charles 2014 Introduction landscape as architecture Studies in the History of Gardens amp Designed Landscapes 187 191 34 3 Hunt John Dixon Conan Michel Goldstein Claire 2002 Tradition and innovation in French garden art chapters of a new history Philadelphia University of Pennsylvania Press p 154 ISBN 0812236343 Waldheim Charles 2014 Introduction landscape as architecture Studies in the History of Gardens amp Designed Landscapes 187 191 34 3 Turner T H D 1982 Scottish Origins of Landscape Architecture Landscape Architecture 52 55 72 3 Antonetti Nina 2012 William Andrews Nesfield and the origins of the landscape architect Landscape History 33 33 1 69 86 doi 10 1080 01433768 2012 671037 S2CID 161055802 Loudon John Claudius 1835 An encyclopaedia of gardening comprising the theory and practice of horticulture floriculture arboriculture and landscape gardening including all the latest improvements a general history of gardening in all countries and a statistical view of its present state with suggestions for its future progress in the British isles Longman Rees Orme Brown Green p 128 ISBN 0434018058 Loudon John Claudius 1835 An Encyclopaedia of Cottage Farm and Villa Architecture and Furniture containing numerous designs for dwellings from the cottage to the villa each design accompanied by analytical and critical remarks Longman Rees Orme Brown Green amp Longman Antonetti Nina 2012 William Andrews Nesfield and the origins of the landscape architect Landscape History 33 33 1 69 86 doi 10 1080 01433768 2012 671037 S2CID 161055802 The origins of landscape architecture a professional title and an art Landscape Architects Association LAA Mawson Thomas H 1911 The Position and Prospects of Landscape Architecture in England The Town Planning Review 225 229 2 3 Aldous Tony 1979 Landscape by design Heinemann pp 120 29 ISBN 0434018058 Downs Annabel 2008 Richard Sudell Oxford Dictionary of National Biography online ed Oxford University Press doi 10 1093 ref odnb 96803 ISBN 978 0 19 861412 8 Subscription or UK public library membership required ILA Quarterly Notes No 6 1932 Aldous Tony 1979 Landscape by design Heinemann pp 120 29 ISBN 0434018058 Aldous Tony 1979 Landscape by design Heinemann ISBN 0434018058 Join the LI Landscape Institute Members Retrieved 2019 01 31 Gosling Ben ChooseLandscape launches next month here s how to get involved Landscape Institute Retrieved 2019 01 31 Choose Your Career Chooselandscape Retrieved 2019 01 31 The Parks Alliance Building with Nature Building with Nature Place Management Place Management Landscapes for Life Landscapes for Life MERL www reading ac uk merl collections Archives A to Z merl SR LI aspx Retrieved 2020 09 03 External links EditChooseLandscape website Landscape Institute website official IFLA International Federation of Landscape Architects website Landscape Institute LI history and future Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Landscape Institute amp oldid 1137400612, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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