Mending the Landscape: Kate Orff
Thursday, January 27, 2022
10:30 a.m. EST | Online
For Kate Orff, landscape architects must do more than “beautify”—they must help reset ecosystems to reconnect people to each other through ecological-social design. In her firm’s signature projects—from the $60 million Living Breakwaters barrier reef and shoreline restoration project off Staten Island, to Atlanta’s Chattahoochee RiverLands, to Resilient Boston Harbor Vision—she’s also spearheading an approach to climate resilience that says we should build with nature, not just in it.
Kate Orff, RLA, FASLA, is founding principal of SCAPE. Through her publications, activism, research, and complex, creative collaborations, she focuses on retooling the practice of landscape architecture relative to the uncertainty of climate change and creating spaces to foster social life. In 2017, Orff was the first landscape architect awarded the MacArthur “Genius Grant,” and in 2019 she received a National Design Award and was elevated to the ASLA Council of Fellows.
We offer Continuing Education credits (CEUS) for LACES for successful completion of this course.
CART Interpretation will be provided at this event. For accommodation requests related to a disability, questions, comments, or more information about the accessibility of this event, please contact Lisa Whitmer at access@nybg.org or 718.817.8765.
Lead image ©SCAPE