Buy This Book

 

Paperback $42.50 ISBN: 9781559637206 Published March 1999

RELATED BOOKS

  •  Big, Wild, and Connected
    Big, Wild, and Connected John Davis
  •  Coastal Impacts, Adaptation, and Vulnerabilities
    Coastal Impacts, Adaptation, and Vulnerabilities Virginia Burkett
  •  Discovering Big Cat Country
    Discovering Big Cat Country Eric Dinerstein
  •  Climate Change and Pacific Islands: Indicators and Impacts
    Climate Change and Pacific Islands: Indicators and Impacts Victoria Keener
  • The Kingdom of Rarities
    The Kingdom of Rarities Eric Dinerstein

Design for Human Ecosystems

Landscape, Land Use, and Natural Resources

 Design for Human Ecosystems
Bookmark and Share

John Tillman Lyle; Foreword by Joan Woodward

288 pages | 8.5 x 11

For more than 30 years, John Tillman Lyle (1934-1998) was one of the leading thinkers in the field of ecological design. Design for Human Ecosystems, originally published in 1985, is his classic text that explores methods of designing landscapes that function in the sustainable ways of natural ecosystems. The book provides a framework for thinking about and understanding ecological design, along with a wealth of real-world examples that bring to life Lyle's key ideas.

Lyle traces the historical growth of design approaches involving natural processes, and presents an introduction to the principles, methods, and techniques that can be used to shape landscape, land use, and natural resources in an ecologically sensitive and sustainable manner. Lyle argues that careful design of human ecosystems recognizes three fundamental concerns: scale (the relative size of the landscape and its connections with larger and smaller systems), the design process itself, and the underlying order that binds ecosystems together and makes them work. He discusses the importance of each of these concerns, and presents a workable approach to designing systems that effectively accounts for all of them. The theory presented is supported throughout by numerous case studies that illustrate its practical applications.

This new edition features a foreword by Joan Woodward, noted landscape architecture professor and colleague of Lyle, that places the book in the context of current ecological design thinking and discusses Lyle's contributions to the field. It will be a valuable resource for landscape architects, planners, students of ecological design, and anyone interested in creating landscapes that meet the needs of all an area's inhabitants -- human and nonhuman alike.

Google preview here