Paperback
- 208 pages
1 edition (February 6, 1995)
John Wiley & Sons

by Philip S. Wenz, Publisher
The former sustainable design editor of Wiley Books, now with Island
Press, is an Ian McHarg fan and related the following story over
a latte. After soldiering in World War Two McHarg, a Scottsman by
birth, returned home and determined what to do with the rest of
his life. For reasons he discusses in Design
With Nature, McHarg decided on landscape architecture,
an academic discipline and profession he knew nothing about.
He learned that Harvard University, in distant New England, had
a good program, so he wrote that august institution a letter informing
them of his intention to study there. He did not apply, mind you,
or complete any pre requisite undergraduate courses. He just told
Harvard when he was coming, appeared on schedule, and began taking
classes, never considering any possibility but his admittance to
a course of study. Unsure as to how to handle the upstart designer,
the academic authorities opened their classrooms and granted him
his degree, or, in his words, "After the war I spend four years
at Harvard where I received assurances that I was a professional
landscape architect and city planner."
An iconoclast from the get go, McHarg wrote what many consider
to be the ecological design classic in a very personal, very
untextbook-like style. A native genius, he refuses to be constrained
by traditional categories that separate self from others, civilization
from ecology. It is this very personal touch that keeps Design
With Nature atop the charts more than thirty years after
it first appeared. No one better expresses the essence of his work
better than McHarg himself:
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.
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.
Along with the poetry we get the instruction of a master, masterfully
expressed. McHargian, in ecological design circles,
means following McHarg's now classic method's of landscape analysis
in the planning of human settlements. Essentially step-by-step instructions
inform the reader who, in McHarg's mind, is a future designer, on
how to break down a region into its appropriate uses. Pointing out
that we build where we should farm, cut forests where we should
grow them, and design forms where we should follow nature's morphologies,
McHarg makes clear and comprehensible recommendations for reversing
the destructive process of development.
If McHarg's book can be criticized at all, it is only from our
current perspective. Design with Nature
falls short of describing a complete, cyclical ecology, and focuses
mostly on patterns of land use and the morphology of human settlements.
This deficiency is in part a reflections of the book's erasuburban
sprawl was seen by many as the principal threat to the natural environment
in the late 1960's. As did many of his contemporaries, including
Frank Lloyd Wright, McHarg views the automobile as a permanent fixture,
and discusses how highways can be better situated in the landscape
not eliminated or scaled back.
Design with Nature, however, does
not pretend to be a textbook of ecological design as way we currently
understand the field. McHarg was bent on preservation, and the reintroduction
of nature to the city. In this, no one has instructed us betteror
more eloquently.
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