看到巴肯的石化景观

IF 1.3 0 ARCHITECTURE
D. Fischer, Meghan L. E. Kirkwood
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引用次数: 0

摘要

21世纪初,北达科他州的巴肯(Bakken)地区掀起了一股石油热潮,以数千口新油井的形式在这片土地上留下了印记。巴肯是位于美国大平原(Great Plains) 20万平方英里(约合20万平方英里)地下的致密页岩地层中的一片油田。容纳油井和数千名新工人的基础设施,在夜间的天光中从太空中可以看到,已经以一种超出这个寒冷而偏远的北部地区范围的方式扰乱了该地区。本文探讨了景观设计师和摄影师参与的循证设计如何改善环境影响声明中的视觉传达,以支持公众对巴肯等地的自然资源和基础设施开发批准及其影响的理解。我们收集了地理参考的公共数据集,进行了同步的实地调查,并拍摄了照片来绘制地图,量化,分析,并将工作并置作为串联显示。对19世纪60年代以来景观设计师和摄影师之间同步工作的历史分析,建立了一个框架,说明这种当代合作如何在视觉上传达许多公众声音的需求。分析揭示了摄影和景观建筑领域的先驱作品之间的一种不言而喻的对话。我们考察了19世纪60年代摄影师卡尔顿·沃特金斯和景观建筑师弗雷德里克·劳·奥姆斯特德的作品;19世纪90年代的摄影师蒂莫西·奥沙利文和景观建筑师h·w·S·克利夫兰和查尔斯·艾略特;20世纪初的环境规划师沃伦·曼宁和阿瑟·g·埃尔德雷奇;和20世纪60年代的景观设计师Ian McHarg。我们也关注最近的合作,比如20世纪90年代景观设计师James Corner和摄影师Alex MacLean之间的合作,以及2010年代摄影师Richard Misrach和景观设计师Kate Orff的当代实践。我们讨论了我们从2014年开始的跨学科研究,以及我们通过测绘、摄影和解释自然资源开采对社会和环境的大规模影响而积累的实证案例研究证据,这些影响是由大量水力压裂加速的。本研究所采用的视觉方法是一种改善受影响环境和环境影响报告书中潜在后果部分的方法。如果更新的公共政策需要这些方法,利益相关者就可以看到和了解隐藏在长篇书面报告中的短期和长期影响的全部范围。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Seeing the Petrochemical Landscapes of the Bakken
In the early 2000s, an oil boom in North Dakota’s Bakken, an oil patch contained within tightly formed shale beds underneath 200,000 square miles of the Great Plains, made its mark on the landscape in the form of thousands of new oil wells. The infrastructure to accommodate the wells and thousands of new workers, visible from space at night in the emergent skyglow, has disrupted the region in ways that have largely gone unobserved beyond the reaches of this cold and remote northern location. This paper asks how evidence-based design involving landscape architects and photographers can improve the visual communication in environmental impact statements to support public understanding of natural resource and infrastructure development approvals and impacts in places like the Bakken. We collected geo-referenced public data sets, conducted synchronous fieldwork, and took photographs to map, quantify, analyze, and juxtapose the work as a tandem display. A historical analysis of synchronous work between landscape architects and photographers from the 1860s onward establishes a framework for how such contemporary collaborations can visually communicate the wants of many public voices. The analysis reveals an unspoken dialog between works by pioneers in the photography and landscape architecture fields. We examine works by photographer Carleton Watkins and landscape architect Frederick Law Olmsted in the 1860s; photographer Timothy O’Sullivan and landscape architects H. W. S Cleveland and Charles Eliot in the 1890s; environmental planners Warren Manning and Arthur G. Eldredge in the 1900s; and landscape architect Ian McHarg in the 1960s. We also look to more recent collaborations, like the one between landscape architect James Corner and photographer Alex MacLean in the 1990s and the contemporary practices of photographer Richard Misrach and landscape architect Kate Orff in the 2010s. We discuss our cross-disciplinary inquiry, begun in 2014, and the empirical case study evidence we accumulated throughmapping, photographing, and interpreting the large-scale social and environmental impacts of natural resource extraction, accelerated by high volume hydraulic fracking. The visual methods employed in this study are posited as a means of improving the affected environment and potential consequences sections of environmental impact statements. If updated public policies required these methods, stakeholders would be allowed to see and understand the full scope of short- and long-term impacts hidden in long written reports.
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来源期刊
Landscape Journal
Landscape Journal ARCHITECTURE-
CiteScore
0.90
自引率
0.00%
发文量
14
期刊介绍: The mission of landscape architecture is supported by research and theory in many fields. Landscape Journal offers in-depth exploration of ideas and challenges that are central to contemporary design, planning, and teaching. Besides scholarly features, Landscape Journal also includes editorial columns, creative work, reviews of books, conferences, technology, and exhibitions. Landscape Journal digs deeper into the field by providing articles from: • landscape architects • geographers • architects • planners • artists • historians • ecologists • poets
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