Tag: restoration ecology

  • Tuesday, January 27, 5:00 pm – 6:00 pm Eastern – Restoration Ecology 101, Online

    Discover small steps you can take on your property to make your space more welcoming to native flora and fauna. In this Native Plant Trust one-hour overview of restoration ecology online on January 27, you’ll learn about the different forms that restoration work can take, including removing invasives, changing the way that water moves through a space, or otherwise taking away impediments to natural flows and processes. First-time homeowners and ecologically-minded individuals will come away with straightforward, simple approaches to getting started with restoration. Brian Colleran will teach the session, which is $25. Register online at https://www.nativeplanttrust.org/events/bot3816-restoration-ecology-101/

  • Thursday, February 1, 6:00 pm – 7:00 pm Eastern – Restoration Ecology 101, Online

    Ecological restoration is a discipline with many applications. This Native Plant Trust webinar on February 1 at 6 pm with Brian Colleran is meant for those who want to know what the term “restoration” means in an ecological context, rather than for those who have experience conducting restoration. Ideal students would be those who have an interest in making their lands more friendly to native flora and fauna and want to take their first steps, but don’t know what to do. $15 NPT members, $18 nonmembers. Register at https://www.nativeplanttrust.org/events/restoration-ecology-101/

    Please note: We do not make video or audio recordings of classes or programs available after the fact, because we believe education is interactive, with instructors and students building a community and culture of learning. Some programs may be recorded strictly for instructor-training purposes. Please visit this page to review this and other FAQs about our policies

  • Thursday, November 8, 6:30 pm – 8:00 pm – Thomas Woltz: Restoration Ecology

    Over the past two decades of practice, landscape architect Thomas Woltz has forged a body of work that integrates the beauty and function of built forms with an understanding of complex biological systems and restoration ecology. As principal of Nelson Byrd Woltz Landscape Architects (NBW), a 45-person firm based in Charlottesville, Virginia and New York City, Woltz has infused narratives of the land into the places where people live, work and play, deepening the public’s enjoyment of the natural world and inspiring environmental stewardship. NBW projects create models of biodiversity and sustainable agriculture within areas of damaged ecological infrastructure and working farmland, yielding hundreds of acres of reconstructed wetlands, reforested land, and flourishing wildlife habitat.

    Presently, Thomas and NBW are entrusted with the design of major public parks across the United States, Canada and New Zealand, they include Memorial Park in Houston, Hudson Yards in New York City, NoMA Green in Washington DC, Cornwall Park in Auckland, the Aga Khan Garden in Alberta, Canada, and three parks in Nashville, including Centennial Park.

    In 2013 was named Design Innovator of the Year by the Wall Street Journal magazine and in 2017 Fast Company named Woltz one of the most creative people in business. Thomas will speak at the Harvard Graduate School of Design’s Piper Auditorium on Quincy Street in Cambridge on Thursday, November 8 at 6:30 pm. Free and open to the public. For more information visit http://www.gsd.harvard.edu/event/thomas-woltz/

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