Tag: Brown University

  • Meg Muckenhoupt Named Executive Director of COGdesign

    Meg Muckenhoupt Named Executive Director of COGdesign

    Our friend Meg Muckenhoupt has assumed the role of Executive Director of COGdesign. Meg brings more than a decade of experience in writing, web publishing, and nonprofit management to her role. Meg is an environmental and travel writer and co-creator of the GREEN SPACES: Boston smartphone app. She has appeared on NPR’s Radio Boston and WCVB’s Chronicle, as well as WGBH’s Forum site. Her work has been featured in the Boston Globe, the Boston Phoenix, Boston Magazine, and the Time Out Boston guide; her book Boston Gardens and Green Spaces (Union Park Press, 2010) is a Boston Globe Local Bestseller. A talented public speaker, she gives frequent talks about Massachusetts landscape history and Boston’s greatest unknown parks to audiences around New England.
    Meg was awarded a certificate in Field Botany by the New England Wild Flower Society and earned degrees from Harvard and Brown University.

    The Community Outreach Group for Landscape Design (COGdesign) connects underserved communities with the technical design assistance they need to bring healthy, attractive open space to their neighborhoods.  COGdesign clients include affordable housing sites, public and private schools, neighborhood parks, Friends groups, churches, municipal agencies, historic sites, arts centers, and community gardens.  COGdesign’s volunteer designers are trained landscape design professionals and students. We recruit seasoned, licensed professionals, recent graduates with innovative ideas, and landscape designers at every level in-between.  Image from boston.com.

    Meg

  • Tuesday, May 5, 6:00 pm – Arts and Crafts Architecture: History and Heritage in New England

    Anyone who has spent time in New England will recognize the century-old buildings that Maureen Meister will discuss in a slide lecture on Tuesday, May 5 at The Gibson House Museum, 137 Beacon Street, that draws upon her new book, Arts and Crafts Architecture: History and Heritage in New England (University Press of New England). Focusing on the 1890s through the 1920s, she will explain how a group of Boston architects and craftsmen were influenced by English Arts and Crafts theories to produce works that are now landmarks, admired for their exquisite ornament. At the same time, the buildings reflect a rich intellectual culture that flourished in New England one hundred years ago. A reception begins at 6, with the lecture at 7. For more information email info@thegibsonhouse.org.
    Maureen Meister is an art historian who writes about American art and architecture of the late nineteenth and early twentieth centuries. She is the author of Architecture and the Arts and Crafts Movement in Boston: Harvard’s H. Langford Warren, 2003, and was volume editor of H. H. Richardson: The Architect, His Peers, and Their Era, 1999. She holds a doctorate from Brown University and an A.B. from Mount Holyoke College. Since 1998, she has taught at Tufts University.

  • Thursday, March 26, 9:00 am – 4:30 pm – Climate Change and the Future of Plant Life

    How will plants respond to the predicted changes in temperature and precipitation from a warming climate? On Thursday, March 26, from 9 – 4:30 at the Microsoft New England R&D Center in Cambridge, five noted botanists and ecologists will present the state of New England’s plants; the historical patterns and current evidence of climate-induced adaptation, migration, and loss; and strategies for conserving and managing plant species and natural communities in the face of climate change. Hosted by New England Wild Flower Society. Symposium fee is $100, and includes continental breakfast and lunch. Register on line at http://www.newfs.org/sym.

    The special guest is Dr. Paul Smith, who will speak on the State of the World’s Plants and the Development of Global Systems for Their Conservation and Use. Dr. Paul Smith, newly appointed Secretary General, Botanic Gardens Conservation International, was the head of the Millennium Seed Bank at the Royal Botanic Gardens, Kew, from 2005 to 2014. During his tenure, the MSB partnership expanded to 170 institutions in 80 countries working together to preserve seeds of all the world’s plants. He is a plant ecologist with expertise in seed conservation, afforestation, and habitat restoration, especially in Africa.

    The United Nation’s Food and Agriculture Organization regularly issues two reports—“State of the World’s Forest Genetic Resources” and “State of the World’s Plant Genetic Resources for Food and Agriculture”— accompanied by global action plans. The approaches to conservation and sustainable use in the action plans offer valuable strategies for those of us in the plant diversity community. Dr. Smith is the recipient of the Society’s inaugural Founders’ Medal.

    Also speaking is Garden Club of the Back Bay favorite Dr. Elizabeth Farnsworth, on State of the Plants: Challenges and Opportunities for Conservation of the New England Flora. She is Senior Research Ecologist, New England Wild Flower Society, and is the author of the Society’s “State of the Plants” report on the status of and threats to native plants and ecological communities in New England, which will be officially released at the symposium. She is the Editor-in-Chief of the botanical journal Rhodora and co-led the development of Go Botany, the Society’s award-winning online guide to the regional flora for teaching botany.

    New England Wild Flower Society is releasing a comprehensive, peer-reviewed report that, for the first time, presents and analyzes the most up-to-date data on the status of plants on the New England landscape. From these data, we can discern increases and declines in both rare and common species across all six states. We identify hotspots of rare plant diversity and discuss factors that foster this diversity. We document the primary ecological and anthropogenic threats to both rare and common species. We discuss activities and initiatives by New England Wild Flower Society and its partner organizations in the New England Plant Conservation Program to conserve and manage rare plants and habitats throughout the region. We articulate a research agenda to bridge gaps in our knowledge of plant species and ecological communities and develop a framework for protecting the viability of thousands of species that together comprise our diverse and vibrant flora.

    Other presentations will be Whither New England? Scenarios for the Future and Perspectives from the Past, given by Dr. David R. Foster, Director of the Harvard Forest, Identifying Species at Risk from Climate Change and Considering Alternative Conservation Strategies, with Dr. Dov F. Sax, Associate Professor of Ecology and Evolutionary Biology at Brown University, and Options: The Key to a Resilient Future, with Andy Finton, Director of Conservation Programs for The Nature Conservancy.

  • Thursday, August 12, 10:00 am – Beyond Blooms: Color and Structure by Season

    Warren Leach, Co-Owner of Tranquil Lake Nursery in Rehoboth, will speak at Highfield Hall, 56 Highfield Drive in Falmouth, on Thursday, August 12 at 10 am.  Warren Leach is an award winning landscape horticulturist who creates enduring garden designs for customers’ homes or businesses.  He has written articles for American Nurseryman on national and spoken at regional events ranging from Brown University and Swarthmore College presentations at several prominent flower shows, to a guest appearance on PBS’s Victory Garden.  He will share how to think about the structure of your garden and the importance of having a plan.  By paying attention to palette, sequence and seasonality, you can develop a winning garden.  $5 suggested donation.  For information, log on to www.highfieldhall.org.

    http://farm1.static.flickr.com/73/201315696_e475c6dccb.jpg