Победитель в категории «Студент или молодой специалист» получит приз €1000. Компании и бюро получат публикацию на главной странице LILA, отдельную страницу для проекта, а также продвижение на платформе Landezine и в новостных рассылках в течение года.
жюри:
Maria Goula – Professor of Landscape Architecture, Cornell University, New York, US
Sotiria Kornaropoulou – Architect at 51N4E, BE
Martin Rein-Cano – Founder of Topotek 1, DE, CH
François Vadepied – Founder of Wagon Landscaping, FR
Lisa Diedrich – LILA 2023 Honour Award Winner
и другие
организатор:
Интернет-издание Landezine
ссылки:
LILA - Landezine International Landscape Award
Премия LILA (Landezine International Landscape Award) отмечает новаторские проекты в ландшафтной архитектуре. Присуждается в нескольких категориях, включая общественные и инфраструктурные пространства, частные сады и придомовые территории. Предусмотрены отдельные номинации для архитектурных бюро, студентов и молодых специалистов.
Landezine International Landscape Award recognises progressive and critically relevant practices in landscape architecture.Established in 2016 by Zaš Brezar, founder of Landezine, and Robert Schäfer, independent journalist and founder of Topos magazine, LILA was conceived as an international platform for identifying and foregrounding exemplary landscape projects and practices from around the world. Since its inception, the award has assembled a substantial archive: all winners since 2016 are publicly accessible, alongside more than 2,000 projects submitted in previous editions.Since the COVID period, the jury process has been structured as a hybrid format. Preliminary deliberations take place online, followed by two days of in-person jury sessions held in Ljubljana, where final discussions and decisions are concluded.
Award categories
1. Built Landscapes architecture projects – regardless of function, context, geography, or scale. Eligible projects include, but are not limited to: small and large projects, private and public spaces, urban and rural landscapes; parks, squares, streets, infrastructure, residential parks, private gardens, campuses, corporate and hospitality landscapes, schools, playgrounds, cemeteries, memorials, temporary installations, exhibitions, and related works. Eligible projects are those for which the last phase of construction was completed after 31 December 2020.
2. Landscape and Architecture – Projects that foreground the relationship between landscape and architecture, regardless of typology, use, or size. Eligible projects are those for which the last phase of construction was completed after 31 December 2020.
3. Revisited Landscapes – Landscape projects of any typology, use, or size, presented through historical and recent(-ish) photographs that illustrate how the project has evolved over time. The last phase of construction must have been completed between 1 January 1991 and 31 December 2010.
The Revisited Landscapes category explicitly acknowledges the reality of long-term use. Traces of everyday life, such as wear, appropriation, graffiti, modification, or material ageing, are understood as normal conditions of lived landscapes and will not negatively affect a project’s chances of recognition. The professional jury will evaluate how forward-looking a project was at the time of its completion and how it continues to operate over time. Rather than rewarding perfected imagery, the jury will look beyond conventional signs of ageing and focus on designs that were ahead of their time and remain meaningful, robust, and actively used despite—or precisely through—these visible signs of life.
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