The Green Team Part 12: Dumpster Diving - Are Container Forests in Our Future?
In our last post, we addressed the challenges of designing around underground utilities. Another challenge faced by property owners and designers is the post-design waiting period—in response to the phasing of projects or due to the unpredictable nature of the construction process.
The typical scene of cranes, fencing, building debris, etc. that is associated with a construction site. Photo: Liz Ernst
Design. Wait. Bid. Wait. Build. Wait. It’s no secret that getting a project built is a process. Once a site is in construction, the finished product could take months—even years—to be completed, and the landscape component of a project often occurs near the end of a site’s construction cycle.
These “waiting periods” are part and parcel of the construction world. So, what if the design process took this waiting period into consideration? What if temporary or short-term strategies could be incorporated into a designer’s plans from the outset?
Rendering from Hudson Square Streetscapes Improvement Plan showing multiple landscape strategies, all of which help form and shape the framework of the final streetscape vision. Courtesy: Mathews Nielsen








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