The botanical garden and zipline for Cherokee Village, a rural mid-century planned community in the Ozarks, is the center piece of new hospitality/eco-tourism landscapes under development.
Through the use of townscaping elements, the design creates a new urban living room for a downtown on the cusp of regeneration.
The environmental education center is conceived as an exhibit landscape that curates visitors’ passage through unique ecological facilities, landscapes, and architectural structures.
This project is an ecotone improvement for the West Side Wastewater Treatment Plant and adjacent Woolsey Wet Prairie Sanctuary, a heritage Ozark preserve.
Instead of new construction, the proposal unearths 13th century cellars and utilizes incremental developments to reunite disjointed functions within the square.
This habitat restoration and education garden for the Paul Nolan Wastewater Treatment Plant and adjacent prairie restores ecological and recreational functions.
This proposal for a South Beach Museum design competition celebrates beachheading in multiple ways: politically, ecologically, urbanistically, and socially.
Identifiable arboreal spatial arrangements like allées, bosques, hammocks, and groves form outdoor rooms to create a living educational center at Little Rock's Two Rivers Park.
Distinguished by their contexts and fluvial profiles, three urban stream reaches are developed to create a new downtown greenway.