In their submissions, members of the profession are encouraged to push beyond the boundaries of everyday practice. The Grants Committee jury is open to submissions exploring new design theories, speculations about new landscape interventions, questioning the current norms of practice, and arguing for new areas of research and professional development, as well as submissions seeking to expand the traditional areas of landscape research.
Proposed research may be in the form of designs, articles, papers, and essays. In all instances the successful proponents are encouraged to promote the wide dissemination of their design-research results in the larger public realm as well as within the profession.
The jury recognizes that the sums awarded by the Foundation are, at best, “seed monies” to instigate further design-research investigation. Preference will be given to those submissions that look beyond the immediate requirements and results of this award. Members of the profession are encouraged to take this opportunity to push the boundaries of inquiry, take some risks, and to enjoy the beginnings of a longer- term journey!
2012 Funding
For 2012, grants up to $10,000 are available to AAPC/CSLA professionals, educators or others seeking to explore or question an issue or particular interest they believe to be crucial to the profession or to the landscape.
In addition, two grants of $2,000 each are offered to graduate students pursuing their thesis or final project for work whose study focus is in keeping with the mandate of the Foundation.
Applicants may apply for additional funding in subsequent years.
Timeline
Fall 2011 Announcement of 2012 Grants Program.
November 18, 2011 Grant applications due
January 2012 Announce recipients and release of 50% of funds.
Winter/Spring 2012 Announcement of award winners in CSLA Bulletin.
December 18, 2012 Finished product submitted, final funds released.
Eligibility
LACF grant applications will be accepted from landscape architects, students, educators and others. Members of the LACF Board of Directors, the LACF Grants Committee, its jury and their relatives are not eligible for grants.
Promotion and Communication of Projects
As a condition of award, all recipients are strongly encouraged to publish, present or appropriately communicate the results of their work to CSLA members, the public or other audiences. It is understood that grant recipients must allow LACF to use the end-product for purposes of promotion and visibility of LACF and to distribute results of funded projects upon requests from others. As well, successful applicants must agree to suitably acknowledge LACF as project sponsors.
Submission Guidelines for 2012
Applicants are required to provide the following information in their submissions. Applications submitted without satisfying all these requirements will not be considered.
1. Concise statement of the proposed project, not to exceed 250 words.
10. Submissions must be received no later than Friday, November 18, 2011.
Send submissions to: fayepaul@mnsi.net
Evaluation by the Grants Jury
The Board of Directors of LACF has established the following evaluation criteria. Members of the LACF Grants Jury will evaluate the submissions based on these criteria. The decisions of the jury are final. The Jury reserves the right not to make any awards.
Property Rights
All documents submitted are the property of the LACF and will not be returned. The LACF assumes no responsibility towards participants for the loss, disappearance or destruction of documents in their application(s), nor for documents submitted late.
Design: Speculate: Postulate: Question: Research: Theorize: Explore
“Everyone designs who devises courses of action aimed at changing existing situations into preferred ones.“
Herbert Simon, 1969 in “The Science of Design: Creating the Artificial”
“Professionalism depends on a body of knowledge about what ought to be. This is not just to do with the market; this is not knowledge in the academic sense. This is about the application of moral obligation in the context of action. Future-seeking knowledge is what the professional bodies of medicine, law and architecture (landscape architecture) are really all about.”
Francis Duffey, 1996 in Mitchell, “New Thinking in Design”
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