Mission

The experience of place can awaken the inner self and strengthen its connection with the outer world. I invite you to join me in exploring the nature of place through tools such as image and labyrinth. 

If you live in or plan to visit the Washington, DC area, come along on one of my expeditions with the DC Metro Labyrinths & Sacred Spaces Meetup group. Check our calendar of events.

Links

Entries in landscape (4)

Saturday
12Dec2009

Street grid: System or mystery?

Clara Barton Parkway, not in Arlington, but across the river in Maryland. I don't seem to have any good photos of the Arlington streetscape. Sounds like a good idea for a future project. If roads could speak. . . . Matt Johnson over at Greater Greater Washington has detailed the logic behind the street names in Arlington County, VA, where I live. It's a system that drives visitors nuts, because many streets are discontiguous. For example, I live on the western segment of Little Falls Road. The eastern segment (where the Knights of Columbus hall is located -- I've given directions many times) starts about a quarter mile away, on the other side of a small shopping center. You'd probably never get from one segment to the other without a map. So that's what we give our kids here when they start driving -- a detailed map book for the glove box. I've lived in Arlington for 20 years, and I still refer to mine at least once a month.

One of the interesting features of our local street grid is that you can clearly pick out the older roads that predate the grid system. That's probably something easy to see almost anywhere, once you peel off the automobile-era layer of the street system. What can you learn about your own local history and environment by looking at those roads?

 

Wednesday
07Oct2009

The landscape for healing

I just love it when related ideas cross paths. Just as I was preparing to launch my Place Keepers web site last week, the new Therapeutic Landscapes Network showed its face to the world, with a mission that is very compatible with that of Place Keepers:

We are an international, multidisciplinary community of designers, health and human service providers, scholars, gardeners, and nature enthusiasts who believe that access to nature is an innate need and a basic human right, and that contact with nature, both wild and designed, enables people to live fuller, richer, healthier lives.

I'm all for that and plan to keep an eye on the TLN blog.

Monday
05Oct2009

Place Keepers workbook released

I am excited to announce the public availability of the Place Keepers workbook, the project that inspired me to create this web site. In 16 pages, this workbook introduces the idea of green space and provides tools to help you get to know a specific local green space and get involved in its care. In making the workbook available for free and unrestricted use, I hope it can inspire individuals, community organizations, and local governments to strengthen their relationship with the land.  

Saturday
07Feb2009

A word from Great Falls Park

Maybe when the world seems dull and brown or gray, it's because we're rushing through it so fast that all the colors blur together. If you want to see the bluebirds through the trees, you have to be still.