LA+ ICONOCLAST asks you to redesign New York’s Central Park, which has been fictionally devastated
by eco-terrorists. Here’s the brief:
Central Park is arguably the canonical
work of modern landscape architecture. Its aesthetic and socio-political ideals
of health, beauty and democracy underpin the profession of landscape
architecture, which Olmsted first named, to this day. Writing of the park in
1973, the artist Robert Smithson claimed that Olmsted “combined both art
and reclamation in Central Park in a way that is truly in advance of his
times.” But what would Olmsted do today? What will you do?
This competition asks that you redesign
Central Park, starting, as Olmsted and Calvert Vaux did, from scratch. In doing
so this competition seeks to explore the following questions: 1) If in parks,
no matter how faux or superficial, we manifest a collective aesthetic
expression of our relationship with the “natural” world, then what, on the
occasion of nature’s disappearance, is the aesthetic of that relationship
today? 2) What is the role of a large urban park today? 3) How might issues of
aesthetics on the one hand and performance on the other coalesce into what
Olmsted described as “a single work of art”? 4) Given the extraordinary history
of the Central Park site, the competition asks how the new interprets the old,
and how together, the new and the old anticipate the future.
In short, the brief is to create the concept for
a new, 21st century Central Park. The brief asks for a plan, a short
explanatory text, and discretionary supporting imagery. The competition
favors conceptual rigor and imagination, and places a premium on engagement
with the questions outlined above. Basic issues of feasibility, materiality, circulation,
and programming will also be taken into consideration by the jury.