LA 6140

LA 6140

Course information provided by the Courses of Study 2014-2015.

This three-credit course examines Latin American landscape architecture.  Lectures, readings and discussions will highlight projects, practices and theories of Latin American landscape-making and urbanism over the last one thousand years. Course sections present a theoretical and thematic framework for examining landscapes such as plazas, canals, municipal parks, ports, infrastructure, etc. Student presentations on specific Latin American landscapes will conclude the course. A fourth credit is available for additional mapping and indexing of historically significant Latin American landscapes. This documentation, requiring weekly meetings with the instructor, will create a spatial and analytical instrument for ongoing landscape and urban studies. 

When Offered Fall.

Permission Note Enrollment limited to: junior, senior, or graduate standing.

Outcomes
  • Access key historical models, practices and precedents of Latin American landscape-making and urbanism.
  • Undertake comparative transnational research framework that is specific to the Latin American condition, allowing for comparative analysis and synthesis across national and regional borders in the Americas.
  • Document Latin America landscape-making and urbanism as it relates to the contemporary United States landscape projects.
  • Evaluate Euro-centric theories, methods, and paradigms that have been historically used to construe and construct landscape in Latin America.

View Enrollment Information

Syllabi: none
  •   Regular Academic Session. 

  • 3-4 Credits Graded

  • 16265 LA 6140   LEC 001

    • T
    • Davis, B

  • Instruction Mode:
    Enrollment limited to: junior, senior, or graduate standing.