Most landscapes are designed to be controlled. But they don’t actually function that way. They grow, shift, and reorganize over time. The session offers a way to think about landscapes as dynamic systems, with real examples from residential design.
Join Rick Darke online on April 28 at 11 am Eastern for a conversation about how to design with those dynamics rather than against them. Can’t make it? A recording will be available following the program. Cost is free – $25 (pay what you can.) The event is a fundraiser for Homegrown National Park and Wild Ones.
Rick Darke is an award-winning landscape designer, author, photographer, and educator known for shaping how we think about wildness in managed landscapes. His work bridges ecology, cultural geography and aesthetics, showing that residential landscapes can be biologically rich and visually compelling at the same time.
Register HERE.

