Tag: Santiago

  • Thursday, April 18, 12:00 noon – 1:30 pm – The Green Ideal: Botanical Practices and the Creation of Santiago’s Civic Landscape

    The Harvard Graduate School of Design presents a free lecture by Romy Hecht on April 18 at 12 noon at 48 Quincy Street in Cambridge entitled The Green Ideal: Botanical Practices and the Creation of Santiago’s Civic Landscape.

    Romy Hecht is a Professor at the School of Architecture, Pontificia Universidad Católica de Chile (PUC), where she gives courses and research seminars on historical narratives and design theories of nineteenth- and twentieth-century landscapes. She holds a Ph.D. in History and Theory of Architecture from Princeton University and an M. Arch and professional degree in architecture from the PUC. She has been a Visiting Professor in the Department of Landscape Architecture at the GSD (2012), in the Ph.D in Architecture program at the Universidad Nacional de Rosario in Argentina (2016) and in the Master in Architecture program at the Pontificia Universidad Católica de Lima (2017). She is also a former fellow at Dumbarton Oaks Research Library and Collection, Washington, D.C. (2015, 2017–2018).

    As an author and recipient of National Grants and research fellowships, Hecht has developed a fundamental task in the studies of landscape architecture in Latin America. She has focused on constructing a comprehensive history of Chile’s landscape projects, particularly in post-independence Santiago, describing how landscape strategies have been shaped by a dynamic relationship between botanical practices, political decisions and economic circumstances giving form to an arboreal culture that has transformed the city.

    Anyone requiring accessibility accommodations should contact the events office at (617) 496-2414 or events@gsd.harvard.edu.

  • October, 2011 – Chile: From Desert to Forest

    This Pacific Horticulture Tour will be escorted by Kathy Musial, Curator of Living Collections, Huntington Botanical Gardens, and board member, Pacific Horticulture Society in October 2011. Join her as she visits central Chile and “Norte Chico” to see spring wildflowers and magnificent forests. You will begin in Chile’s capital, Santiago, where you’ll see the new Chagual Botanic Garden and visit private gardens featuring native plants, including those of Juan Grimm, Chile’s leading landscape architect. You then head north to the edge of the Atacama Desert, where, if the rains have been good, you’ll be treated to the spectacular “Desierto Florido” (the Flowering Desert), with carpets of bulbs and annuals. Traveling southward, you’ll explore the Mediterranean climate vegetation of central Chile, similar to California’s chaparral but sprinkled with puyas and cacti. South of Santiago, you’ll visit forests with vegetation transitioning from Mediterranean to rain forest, ending up at magnificent stands of monkey puzzle trees (Araucaria araucana – image below from www.redwoodgardenbridges.com), one of Chile’s signature plants.  For more information please contact: Hidden Treasures Botanical Tours at (573) 881-6316, or log on to http://www.hiddentreasuresbotanicaltours.com/pacific.html.  Please note that prior trips organized for Pacific Horticulture had been managed by a different tour operator, and some potential travelers (including me!) had difficulty communicating with the other company. Hidden Treasures promises to be much more responsive.