Sylvan City Design
A Visual Manual of Urban Tree and Forest Landscape Architecture
Catherine Dee(Author)
Routledge (Publisher)
1st Edition
Will be published approx. on 17. August 2026
Book
Paperback/Softback
224 pages
978-1-032-73857-4 (ISBN)
Description
Richly illustrated with the author's exquisite drawings, this visual manual provides a concise and practical introduction to contemporary urban landscape architecture with trees and forest: Sylvan City Design.
Aimed at student and professional landscape architects and environmental designers, the manual will also appeal to other urban disciplines and to communities engaged with neighbourhood spaces in the context of the potential for trees to transform city living for climate resilience, green health, social equity, biodiversity and - at the same time - enriched urban culture.
A sylvan city is foremost 'made, shaped or formed of woods or trees'. Catherine Dee sets out to demonstrate how and why settlements may be better designed by considering trees as the indispensable 'ground' of a city, forming a life-giving, long-term dwelling matrix into which buildings and built infrastructure are fitted.
The manual is organised in two parts. Part I: Principles, Strategies + Methods introduces the central aims of sylvan city design and establishes key design principles, strategies and ethos: 1 What is a Sylvan City? 2 What is Sylvan Design? 3 Sylvan Space, 4 Sylvan Time, 5 Sylvan Climate and 6 Sylvan Specificity, Diversity + Robustness.
Part II: Forms, Functions + Habitats explores context-specific design, illustrating a wide range of urban situations, scales and types of tree environment from tiny street corners through to city-wide tracts using the patterns: Forest, Locale, Greenway, Grove, Glade, Parkland, Avenue, Hedgerow, Thicket, Garden, Farm, Woodland, and Wilderness. In each section, the design approach is to refresh and re-orient long-practised forms of tree cultivation and ecological management by matching them with urban social, cultural and biodiversity functions to create a contemporary environmental language adaptable to evolving sylvan cities in diverse global regions and changing climates.
Communicated in vivid drawings inspiring new ways to dwell with trees, this is a DIY landscape architecture manual for all.
Aimed at student and professional landscape architects and environmental designers, the manual will also appeal to other urban disciplines and to communities engaged with neighbourhood spaces in the context of the potential for trees to transform city living for climate resilience, green health, social equity, biodiversity and - at the same time - enriched urban culture.
A sylvan city is foremost 'made, shaped or formed of woods or trees'. Catherine Dee sets out to demonstrate how and why settlements may be better designed by considering trees as the indispensable 'ground' of a city, forming a life-giving, long-term dwelling matrix into which buildings and built infrastructure are fitted.
The manual is organised in two parts. Part I: Principles, Strategies + Methods introduces the central aims of sylvan city design and establishes key design principles, strategies and ethos: 1 What is a Sylvan City? 2 What is Sylvan Design? 3 Sylvan Space, 4 Sylvan Time, 5 Sylvan Climate and 6 Sylvan Specificity, Diversity + Robustness.
Part II: Forms, Functions + Habitats explores context-specific design, illustrating a wide range of urban situations, scales and types of tree environment from tiny street corners through to city-wide tracts using the patterns: Forest, Locale, Greenway, Grove, Glade, Parkland, Avenue, Hedgerow, Thicket, Garden, Farm, Woodland, and Wilderness. In each section, the design approach is to refresh and re-orient long-practised forms of tree cultivation and ecological management by matching them with urban social, cultural and biodiversity functions to create a contemporary environmental language adaptable to evolving sylvan cities in diverse global regions and changing climates.
Communicated in vivid drawings inspiring new ways to dwell with trees, this is a DIY landscape architecture manual for all.
More details
Language
English
Place of publication
London
United Kingdom
Publishing group
Taylor & Francis Ltd
Target group
College/higher education
Professional and scholarly
Postgraduate and Professional Practice & Development
Illustrations
191 farbige Abbildungen, 191 Farbfotos bzw. farbige Rasterbilder
191 Halftones, color; 191 Illustrations, color
Dimensions
Height: 234 mm
Width: 156 mm
Weight
453 gr
ISBN-13
978-1-032-73857-4 (9781032738574)
Copyright in bibliographic data is held by Nielsen Book Services Limited or its licensors: all rights reserved.
Schweitzer Classification
Other editions
Additional editions
Book
approx. 08/2026
1st Edition
Routledge
€191.50
Not yet published
Person
Catherine Dee is a landscape architect, artist and design educator. Her books and international studio teaching concern the development of thrift-abundance design practices integrating ecology and arts in the use of context-specific 'everyday' spatial intervention and improvisation. She is the author of Form and Fabric in Landscape Architecture and To Design Landscape: Art, Nature and Utility. A founding editor of JoLA: the European Journal of Landscape Architecture, she established and edited the journal's 'Thinking Eye' critical visual essay section and today continues to foster and support its mission. She lives and works in Northumberland, UK, drawing, cultivating an experimental tree garden, writing and teaching innovation design studios as Visiting Professor in Landscape Architecture Arts at Newcastle University, UK.
Content
Introduction Part I: Principles, Strategies + Methods 1. What is a Sylvan City? 2. What is Sylvan Design? 3. Sylvan Space 4. Sylvan Time 5. Sylvan Climate 6. Sylvan Specificity, Diversity + Robustness Part II: Forms, Functions + Habitats 7. Forest 8. Locale 9. Greenway 10. Grove 11. Glade 12. Parkland 13. Avenue 14. Hedgerow 15. Thicket 16. Garden 17. Farm 18. Woodland 19. Wilderness