The prize is named for Cornelia Hahn Oberlander,aGerman-born Canadian landscape architect who died in May of complications from COVID-19, weeks shy of her 100th birthday. TheNew York Timescalled her the grandedame of landscape architecture, and she was renowned for socially responsible, collaborative work, from playgrounds to museums, which blended prescient advocacy for environmental sustainability with a modernist sensibility. Perhaps her most celebrated project Robson Square,a three-block public plazain Vancouver, designed with architect Arthur Erickson.

Bargmann, who has practiced for more than 30 years (she is also a Professor of Landscape Architecture at the University of Virginia) focuseson contaminated, neglected, and forgotten urban and post-industrial sites. Working closely with architects, historians, engineers, hydrogeologists, artists, and local stakeholders, she has transformed Superfund, mining, and manufacturing sites, and created parks, corporate campuses, and housing.She often speaks of her her desire to unearth design elements from cast off places.

Shealsobrings her background as an artist (she earned a Bachelor of Fine Arts in Sculpture from Carnegie Mellon University and aMaster in Landscape Architectureat Harvards GraduateSchool of Design) to all of her work, unearthing a narrative for each project that is rooted in its history and offers up alternative and experimental possibilities for the future.

Asked what she might do with the Oberlanders cash award,Bargmanntells Metropolis: It will probably involve a few of my favorite things: A long road trip, defunct and fallow land, the neighbors, mayors, and aspiring landscape architects.

By honoringBargmannan activist, provocateur, critic, and public intellectualas its inaugural laureate, the Oberlander Prize claims landscape architectures increasingly cross-disciplinary mantle with pride and urgent, agitational insistence.

The clear signal that [the Oberlander] sends to the landscape discipline is that those who are working on the margins are those who are creating the most innovation, often, says Maurice Cox, commissioner of Chicagos Department of Planning and Development, in a TCLF video introducingthe prize winner. Bargmann was selected by an independentseven-person jury chaired byDorotheImbert, the landscape architecture chair and director of the Knowlton School at The Ohio State University.

TCLF has been working for years to establish the prize. In 2017, TCLF board member JoanShafranand her husband RobHaimesdonated $1 million to supportits creation; TCLF board members and other supporters have since made significant donations. Honorees will be included in TCLFs oral historyarchiveand their projects will be added to the organizations database of more than 2,100 significant built landscapes. Going forward, their work will be assessed on a regular basis for any threats from neglect or destruction.

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Julie Bargmann Is the Winner of the Inaugural Oberlander Prize; a Pritzker Prize for Landscape Architecture. - Metropolis Magazine

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October 22, 2021 at 1:49 am by Mr HomeBuilder
Category: Landscape Architect