Publication Date
June 2004
Journal or Book Title
Multiple Landscape: Merging Past and Present in Landscape Planning, Proceedings of the 5th International Workshop on Sustainable Land Use Planning
Abstract
In the cultural ‘melting pot’ of a world economy, traditional, culturally-defined landscapes are being modified under a myriad of international influences. In this context, it is often difficult to identify the landscape and design forms that are key to maintaining local identity and a sense of place. Identifying these forms is critical in the planning process, as local planners and decision-makers attempt to integrate new, globally-influenced development patterns in local communities and at the same time create spaces and places that will not destroy local values and associations. The landscapes, their vectors, and the changes they engendered, will be used to illuminate the design decisions made as a result of absorbing one culture’s norms of land patterning into another.
Recommended Citation
Brabec, Elizabeth, "Landscape Change: The influence of external cultural forces" (2004). Multiple Landscape: Merging Past and Present in Landscape Planning, Proceedings of the 5th International Workshop on Sustainable Land Use Planning. 4.
Retrieved from https://scholarworks.umass.edu/larp_faculty_pubs/4
Included in
Cultural Resource Management and Policy Analysis Commons, Historic Preservation and Conservation Commons