海角大神

This article appeared in the October 15, 2021 edition of the Monitor Daily.

Read 10/15 edition

Prize-winning 鈥榯oxic avenger鈥 turns Superfund sites into art

Barrett Doherty/Courtesy of The Cultural Landscape Foundation
Julie Bargmann, 2021 Oberlander Prize laureate.
Peter Grier
Washington editor

Old coal mines. Shuttered auto plants. A decrepit U.S. Navy yard.

Promising sites for landscape architecture? They don鈥檛 sound like it. But one pioneering designer takes such rough grounds and transforms them into beautiful places that honor what happened there, using reclaimed materials, grasses and trees, and imagination.

Her name is Julie Bargmann, and she鈥檚 a professor at the University of Virginia and founder of the design studio D.I.R.T., an acronym that stands for Dump It Right There. This week , a new award intended to boost visibility for the discipline.

As a child, crammed into the family station wagon, Professor Bargmann was fascinated by the refineries and other industrial sites on the New Jersey Turnpike.聽

As an adult, she鈥檚 used a passive treatment system to turn a toxic area in a Pennsylvania mining town into public art space. She convinced Ford to use plants that clean contaminated soil in disused areas of the automaker鈥檚 River Rouge Complex near Detroit.

She planted cherry trees in reclaimed rubble at the shuttered Philadelphia Navy Yard, helping transform it into retailer Urban Outfitters鈥 headquarters.聽

鈥淚 have been called the 鈥榯oxic avenger,鈥 and I鈥檓 like, really, do I want to strap on that cape? And in a lot of ways I do, not to save people but to engage them in such a way that they can be agents of change for the landscape,鈥 said Ms. Bargmann in a .


This article appeared in the October 15, 2021 edition of the Monitor Daily.

Read 10/15 edition
You've read  of  free articles. Subscribe to continue.