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Landscape : Pattern, Perception and Process
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Author:
Simon BellNumber Of Downloads:
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Language:
English
File Size:
24.72 MB
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Pages:
359
Quality:
excellent
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388
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Book Description
"Landscape: Pattern, Perception and Process" by Simon Bell is a comprehensive guide to understanding landscapes and their patterns, perceptions, and processes. The book provides an in-depth analysis of the landscape as a complex system, and how it influences and is influenced by human perception and activity.
The book is divided into three sections, each of which covers a specific topic related to landscape pattern, perception, and process. The first section provides an overview of landscape as a complex system and the key concepts related to it. It discusses the different scales of landscape, the patterns that can be observed, and the processes that drive change.
The second section of the book examines the human perception of landscapes. It discusses how people perceive landscapes and the role that cultural, social, and psychological factors play in shaping these perceptions. The section also covers the impact of human activities on landscapes and how these activities affect perceptions.
The final section of the book focuses on landscape processes. It provides a detailed analysis of the different processes that drive change in landscapes, including natural processes, such as erosion and climate change, and human-induced processes, such as land-use change and urbanization. The section also covers the role of landscape management in maintaining and enhancing landscape quality.
Overall, "Landscape: Pattern, Perception and Process" by Simon Bell is a valuable resource for anyone interested in understanding the complexities of landscapes and their interactions with human activities. The book is well-researched, comprehensive, and provides practical guidance on how to manage landscapes in a sustainable way. Whether you are a landscape architect, planner, researcher, or student, this book is an essential tool for understanding and managing landscapes for the benefit of both people and the environment.
Simon Bell
Dr Simon Bell is a forester-turned-landscape architect. He is interested in aspects of the wider landscape, such as forests, rural and wild landscapes as well as the peri-urban zone. This includes planning and design aspects, forest landscape aesthetics, urban forestry, urban blue spaces, outdoor recreation and the health and well-being benefits of exposure to nature in such areas. Accessibility by people from a range of backgrounds to such landscapes has also been a feature of his research and practice.
Simon was educated in forestry at The University of Wales, Bangor (now Bangor University), landscape architecture at the University of Edinburgh and took his doctorate in landscape architecture at the Estonian University of Life Sciences where he is also Chair Professor and Head of the Department of Landscape Architecture.
Before academia Simon worked for 20 years for the Forestry Commission, ending his time there as Chief Landscape Architect. He has worked all over the UK and also extensively on forestry design projects and as a trainer in Canada and the USA as well as Ireland, Finland and the Baltic States. When practicing privately as a landscape architect he worked on many forest landscape design plans for the Forestry Commission and for private forestry companies in Scotland. He worked on the regeneration of the Caledonian Forest in Glenfeshie for Glenfeshie Estate in the Cairngorms National Park and designing extensive new forests such as Victory wood in Kent, Heartwood Forest in Hertfordshire (also incorporating a native tree arboretum), Queen Elizabeth II Diamond Jubilee Wood in Leicestershire and the First World War Commemorative woodland in Surrey all for the Woodland Trust.
He is a Professor in the Latvian University of Life Sciences as well as having been Visiting Professor at the Warsaw University of Life Sciences. For several years has been a Visiting Professor at Harbin Institute of Technology in Harbin, China.
From 2012 to 2018 Simon was President of the European Council of Landscape Architecture Schools (ECLAS). This body represents the interest of landscape architecture educators and researchers, holds a prestigious annual conference, presents awards for teaching and research and owns the Journal of Landscape Architecture.
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