After successful completion of the course, students are able to name the main lines of development in landscape architecture and to consider them as a context for current questions about open space planning.
The course is dedicated to the history, structure, typology and use of open spaces in modern garden design and urban planning. In addition to the phenomenology and organization of the places, the main focus is on the landscape-topographical context of the large garden concepts as well as the (urban) spatial references of the squares, streets, paths and gardens in the structure of the building. Social and functional aspects of the passages, passages and transitions in the gardens and the city are discussed. The course is supplemented with two small excursions, one on the special situation of landscape parks on the outskirts of a small town and one on typical settlement structures in Vienna.
Meeting. Tuesday afternoon, Introduction to the lecture on March 14 at 3 p.m. Program and organizational details will follow.
comparative analysis, discussion, field trip
exam colloquium