A design competition for Tempelhofer Feld highlights the long-running dissension over the fate of central Berlin’s largest open space. https://t.co/pckTDWZnZ3
JUNE 2026: FUTURE TENSE
Tempelhofer Feld, Berlin's former airport turned beloved public park, sits at the center of a debate over the city's future. Michael Dumiak revisits the vast open space as residents push to preserve it and officials consider using parts of it for housing.
The Eaton Fire stalled earlier plans to upgrade Charles White Park, but now SALT Landscape Architects and Disney are among those reviving and expanding the vision.
Read the story on LAM Online. https://t.co/6EJKuOkrJ3
Landscape architects at the National Park Service are facing staff cuts, stalled projects, shrinking budgets, and growing concern over the future of public lands. https://t.co/ngL7PFeHh8
MAY 2026: ROUGH CUTS
The cover story, written by Bradford McKee and illustrated by Eduardo Luzzatti, reports on deep staff and budget cuts that threaten the National Park Service's stewardship mission.
LAM won 3 2026 Mid-Atlantic Azbee Awards.
Publication Design (October 2025)
Design of a Single Article
Best Profile — "Elizabeth Kennedy's Quiet Revolution" by Sala Elise Patterson. Photos by Sahar Coston-Hardy
Presented by the American Society of Business Publication Editors.
APRIL 2026: LOVE, ISLAND
On the cover: Brown’s Island in Richmond is reworked to expand connections between the James River and the city, creating a versatile public landscape by Timmons Group and 3North.
AI-generated images leave many landscape architects cold, but perhaps there are other ways to use them that can increase community engagement. Aaron Thompson, ASLA, who used AI assists in the Diverse Corn Belt project workshops, thinks so. https://t.co/0HaFMda0Ui
MARCH 2026: PROMPTS FOR PROCESS
On the cover: The potential of AI text-to-graphic technology to translate community engagement comes down to the workflow.
Dan Barefoot's Olympic Juggling Act
How a landscape architect made it to Cortina by focusing on what's "right in front of me."
Read more at LAM Online: https://t.co/vsF2e3asEw
From agricultural landscapes in the Midwest to everyday urban places, Joan Nassauer, FASLA, has spent her career exploring how aesthetics, ecology, and cultural values intersect. https://t.co/a5ZYx6LdR5