A bet on a blueway: a new project along Alabama's Mobile River is designed to interpret the story of Africatown
págs. 16-19
Natural resting place: the world's first SITES-certified cemetery is designed as a successional forest
págs. 20-23
Indiana invitational: Exhibit Columbus's second run zooms out in search of the 'spirit of the community' [Indiana]
págs. 24-27
Desert promenade: a historic canal in Chandler, Arizona, gets a sensitive and pedestrian-friendly face-lift
págs. 28-28
Merge with nature: at a Hong Kong sewage plant, a self-sufficient nature retreat puts water into focus
págs. 30-33
Atlas of abandonment: Jill Desimini on her new book, 'From fallow : 100 ideas for abandoned urban landscapes'
págs. 34-47
One fish, more fish: why a Maryland landscape architect restores brook trout habitats in his free time
págs. 48-67
Home away from no home: landscape architects can't solve homelessness with just design. As Brice Maryman, ASLA, is finding, they have to grasp the phenomenon - and are only beginning
págs. 68-77
Tunnel vision: an old coal loader in Sydney went the way of coal, and the people nearby pressed for something everyone could share [Coal Loader Platform]
págs. 78-99
The lawn is gone: the landscape designer Naomi Sanders transforms a pointless patch of turf in Los Angeles
págs. 100-115
The heavy hand: the photographer Edward Burtynsky documents the human impact on earth
págs. 118-129
This land is her land - Herlands: exploring the women's land movement in the United States, by Keridwen N. Lius
pág. 132
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