Here are a few that come quickly to mind:
Tanner Springs Park (Portland)
South Waterfront (Portland)
Epler Hall, Portland State (Portland)
Bioretention and educational component
Citygarden (St. Louis)
Bioswales/ bioretention along cross-streets,…
We were in NYC in the spring and the plaza at 55 Water Street (Ken Smith) had a turf panel that was synthetic. The newer surfaces can fool you from a distance and can only tell its fake when you're up close. I'm betting they chose it for maintenance…
Portland does a great job of creating individual cells that daisy chain together with each cell having an inlet and an outlet. Most of their examples are on pretty shallow grade, though and street in the St. John's area outside Portland was a bit st…
Great photos - thanks for posting. I noticed that your recent galleries have been of LA and was curious if you have any recommendations on must-see landscapes or built projects in LA? I am moving there in the next week, and although I know some of the big ones, am always interested in hearing about projects off the beaten path. Thanks.
Do you have any free time this weekend? I spoke with Brian last Saturday and was hoping to talk with you this weekend. I'll hope to hear back from you :)
Can this count as a contest entry? Oops, you give out the prize! Just the same, sending you my friend invite. Another jewel of an inspiration; thanks for the inspiring collection!
It's cool to see photos of Portland and Seattle...my old hometowns! I did some work in the south waterfront district. I was part of the team for the south waterfront greenway master plan, back when holes were just beginning to be dug. It's so crazy to watch the physical development of that new neighborhood.
Out of curiosity, where did you see that art piece with the rubber yellow strings hanging down that people could go through? I saw something exactly like that in Mexico City a couple years ago in the plaza outside the Bellas Artes!