February 26 – 28, 2025, ETH Zürich (exact location TBA)
The colloquium will investigate the relationship between the design and maintenance of living systems, seeking to cultivate practices, terminology, and theoretical insights into approaches that attempt to maintain otherwise.
Open Call
The current separation between landscape design and landscape maintenance is no longer tenable. Unpredictable weather patterns and dwindling water supplies intersect with cuts to municipal budgets and increasingly precarious conditions for landscape laborers. And yet entrenched project structures and practices limit opportunities for exchange and dialogue. Consequently, landscapes are simplified to facilitate repetitive, low-skilled maintenance, limiting their ecological complexity, resilience and aesthetic potential.
In light of this, the 2025 NSL colloquium investigates the relationship between design and maintenance of living systems, seeking to cultivate practices, terminology, and theoretical insights into ways of maintaining otherwise. On the one hand, innovative management techniques can introduce a much-needed sensitivity and open-endedness to design practice. On the other hand, iterative design thinking can enliven routine maintenance patterns to make the most of limited resources. This intersection is a space of opportunity, both to question disciplinary boundaries—including the uneven distribution of prestige, precarity, and compensation that underlie them—and to move from attempting to control more-than-human nature towards a performative call and response.
Accordingly, Beyond Maintenance invites proposals spanning research, practice, and pedagogy that contribute experimental methodologies, theories, and concrete cases that support tending landscapes in crisis. Aiming to open up a conversation across disciplines, we encourage scholars and practitioners from landscape architecture, urban studies, horticulture, restoration ecology and related fields to submit to the open call.
Submission Guidelines
Please send a 200-word abstract including up to three images and a 100-word bio by November 8, 2024 to beyondmaintenance@arch.ethz.ch, clearly stating the format (academic paper, synthetic reflections from practice or teaching) of your contribution. Please indicate if you need financial assistance, as there is limited funding available to support participants in cases where the host institution is unable to provide it.
The colloquium has been made possible by the Netzwerk Stadt und Landschaft and the Chair of Being Alive. It is organized by Luke Harris, Johanna Just, Camila Medina Novoa and Cara Turett. Graphic design Studio Matthias Wyler.
Contact: beyondmaintenance@arch.ethz.ch