Waldheim, Charles
ROBERT STEUTEVILLE    FEB. 25, 2011
Academic, designer, writer
Affiliations:
- John E. Irving professor and chair of landscape architecture, Harvard Graduate School of Design, to the present
- Principal, Urban Agency, to the present
Papers and other published materials:
- Waldheim, C. (2006a). Landscapes as Urbanism. In The Landscape Urbanism Reader (pp. 35-54). New York: Princeton Architectural Press.
- Waldheim, C. (2006b). A Reference Manifesto. In The Landscape Urbanism Reader (pp. 13-19). New York: Princeton Architectural Press.
- Waldheim, C. (2006c). Precedents for a North American Landscape Urbanism. In On Landscape Urbanism (pp. 292-303). Austin TX: Center for American Architecture and Design University of Texas at Austin School of Architecture.
- Waldheim, C. (2006c). The Landscape Urbanism Reader. New York: Princeton Architectural Press.
- Waldheim, C. (2011). Chicago O’Hare: A Natural and Cultural History.
- Waldheim, C. (2012). Ford’s Fields: Essays on Landscape, Urbanism, and Industrial Economy.
Education:
- Master of Architecture, Paul Cret Medal, Melhorn Award (Graduate), University of Pennsylvania School of Design, to 1989
Intellectual positions:
- Landscape fills a professional void left by planners.
- Landscape is more efficient than urbanism at creating formal effects, and is more appropriate to decentralized urbanization.
- Landscape Urbanism is a more challenging and appropriate alternative to "nostalgic urban consumption" and "public therapy."
- Postmodernism is "layered, non-hierarchical, flexible, and strategic."
- Sprawl need not be considered normative, but it must be accepted as the reality.
- The city is not in a dialectical relationship with nature.
- The image of untamed pastoral nature as an ideal is unrealistic in modern times.