How do we address the present reckoning with spatial inequities and reimagining our built and natural environment through the practice and profession of landscape architecture? In this inaugural “Race & Space Conversation” organized by The Cultural Landscape Foundation (TCLF), moderator and transdisciplinary designer April De Simone, principal at Trahan Architects, speaks with panelists including historian and author Linda Tarrant-Reid of New Rochelle, N.Y.; Partners for Environmental Justice board member Amin Davis of Raleigh, N.C.; and urbanist and kin-keeper Angela Kyle of Pensacola, FL who engage with this question and explore case studies of three sites featured in TCLF’s report Landslide 2021: Race and Space. Landscape architects Walter Hood, creative director of Hood Design Studio and professor of landscape architecture & environmental planning and urban design at U.C. Berkeley, and Kofi Boone, Joseph D. Moore Distinguished Professor of Landscape Architecture and Environmental Planning at North Carolina State University, join the conversation and investigate how our surroundings construct and convey identity and culture and the systems that uplift or erase that constructed experience. This conversation digs deep into topics including spatial nostalgia, erasure, and the need to amplify community voices in the design process and redefine the concept of “integrity” in historic preservation work.
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