Ian McHarg
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Ian L. McHarg (1920-2001) was a landscape architect and the founder of the Department of Landscape Architecture at the University of Pennsylvania. After working with the Royal Engineers during World War II he was admitted to the architecture school at Harvard where he completed degrees in landscape architecture and city planning. His 1969 book Design with Nature pioneered the concept of ecological planning and it continues to be one of the most widely celebrated books on landscape architecture and land-use planning. In this book he set forth the basic concepts that would later form the field of Geographic Information Systems.
Ian McHarg was born in 1920 near the industrial city of Glasgow, Scotland. His father was a minister there while his mother, like most mothers at this time, was a homemaker. When McHarg was younger it was noticed how much he enjoyed drawing and walking which is why he was advised to consider a career in landscape architecture. It was in his hometown of Glasgow that he gained an appreciation of the need for cities to better accommodate the qualities of the natural environment that had been largely shunned (Corbett, 1). But it was not until after his term in the British Parachute Brigade, serving in war-stricken Italy during World War II, that he was able to further explore this idea. After the war he traveled to America to attend Harvard University where he received his professional degrees in both landscape architecture and city planning. From here McHarg began teaching at the University of Pennsylvania where he developed the Department of Landscape Architecture as well as offered a new course titled “Man and Environment” (Penn. Gazette, 1).
His accomplishments escalated after this point. In 1960 he hosted his own show on CBS, “The House We Live In.” In 1969 he published his book Design with Nature, which was essentially step-by-step instructions on how to break down a region into its appropriate uses (Wenz, 2). McHarg said about his book,
This book is a personal testament to the power of sun, moon, and stars, the changing seasons, seedtime and harvest, clouds, rain and rivers, the oceans and the forests, the creatures and the herbs. They are with us now, co-tenants of the phenomenal universe, participating in that timeless yearning that is evolution, vivid expressions of time past, essential partners in survival and with us now involved in the creation of the future (Corbett, 2).
Our eyes do not divide us from the world, but unite us with it. Let this be known to be true. Let us then abandon the simplicity of separation and give unity its due. Let us abandon the self mutilation which has been our way and give expression to the potential harmony of man-nature. The world is abundant; we require only a deference born of understanding to fulfill man’s promise. Man is that uniquely conscious creature who can perceive and express. He must become the steward of the biosphere. To do this he must design with nature (Corbett, 2).
Design with nature is sharply critical of the French style of garden design, which McHarg saw as a subjugation of nature, and full of praise for the English style of garden design, which McHarg saw as a prototype for his 'design with nature' philosophy. McHarg's own plans for urban expansion projects were more 'English' than 'French' in their plan geometry. He favored what became known as 'cluster development' with relatively dense housing in a natural environment. McHarg was also interested in garden design and believed that homes should be planned and designed with good private garden space.
In 1996 he published his autobiography, A Quest for Life. Besides writing he also was involved in many important projects; the 1962 Plan for the Valleys in Baltimore County, Maryland; the Inner Harbor in Baltimore; the Woodlands in Houston, Texas; and regional plans for the Twin Cities of Minnesota, Washington D.C. and Denver, Colorado (Penn. Gazette,1).
Ian McHarg died March 5, 2001 at age 80 from pulmonary disease. Throughout his life McHarg sought a new union between man and nature. This was inspired by his childhood in the industrial city of Glasgow that largely shunned the natural environment. He has developed this union between man and nature through his teachings, projects, books, and desire to bring it about.
Books
- To Heal the Earth: Selected Writings of Ian L. McHarg 1998 ISBN 1559635738
- A Quest for Life: An Autobiography Ian L. McHarg 1996 ISBN 0471086282
- Design with Nature Ian L. McHarg 1969 ISBN 047111460X
See also
External links
- [Biography from Center for Spatially Integrated Social Science] John Corbett 2005
- [Obituary at Pennsylvania Gazette]
- [Book review of Design with Nature from Ecotecture] Philip Wenz 2003
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