He moved back to California and worked briefly with landscape designer Thomas Church, and then he took a job with the Farm Security Administration, designing migrant worker camps. Throughout his career, Eckbo saw landscape design as a vehicle for social change.
In 1964 he started the firm of Eckbo, Dean, Austin & Williams, known as EDAW. He taught at the University of Southern California and was chair of the University of California, Berkeley's Department of Landscape Architecture from 1965-1969. In 1975 he was awarded the American Society of Landscape Architects' Medal of Honor.
From ced.berkeley.edu and tclf.org
Eckbo sketches djc.com |
Tucson Convention Center tclf.org |
Ambassador College, Pasadena, CA tclf.org |
Ocotillo Lodge, Palm Springs, CA tclf.org |
Fulton Mall, Fresno, CA tclf.org |
Residential garden in Berkeley, CA erirentals.com |
Residential landscaping in Los Angeles, CA georgeandeileen.com |
So fantastic. I've been to the Pasadena Ambassador college grounds.
ReplyDelete@Rhan: I read that some of the college buildings, as well as some of Eckbo's landscaping, were scheduled for demolition. I hope that's been avoided.
ReplyDelete