Inland Empire Tree and Landscape Pros

Inland Empire Tree and Landscape Pros Whether for a house or commercial property our extraordinary arborists are prepared to tackle any task. What does this mean to you?

The Certified Arborist credential identifies professional arborists who have a minimum of three years full-time experience working in the professional tree care industry and who have passed an extensive examination covering all facets of arboriculture. Many arborists also have degrees in the field of arboriculture, horticulture, landscape architecture, or forestry from an accredited university. Ar

borists also subscribe to a Code of Ethics that has been certified by the American National Standards Institute. By working with a Certified Arborist you can have the confidence that you are working with a full time career professional. Your Arborist will have extensive knowledge of all types of trees, soil conditions, local bugs and pests that can be harmful to your trees. In short, think of your Certified Arborist as a Tree Doctor…because that is what they are.

12/04/2024

When should a potentially hazardous tree be removed? Many factors influence the decision.

10/08/2024

Fertilisation in autumn provides trees the essential nutrients they need to accommodate root growth.

10/08/2024

Fertilization in the fall provides trees the essential nutrients they need to accommodate root growth.

09/07/2024

This time of year, it’s important to look for premature autumn color and leaf drop. These symptoms may indicate a serious problem with your trees.

08/07/2024

Many insects like borers, mites, scale and some beetles are active during summer. After diagnosis, proper treatments that are timed appropriately are critical to managing damaging pest populations.

07/09/2024

Storm season is here! Be sure to have your property reviewed to help prevent damage during inclement weather.

05/08/2024

A common disease that attacks many species, Phytophthora Root Rot can be managed through cultural practices and appropriately timed treatments.

05/08/2024

A common disease that attacks many species, phytophthora root rot can be managed through cultural practices and appropriately timed treatments.

02/07/2024

Agrivoltaic farm, California / istockphoto.com, JasonDoiy

Solar energy currently accounts for nearly 5 percent of total U.S. energy generation. With increased investment from the Infrastructure Investment and Jobs Act and Inflation Reduction Act, that number could grow to 40 percent in the next decade. Where will all these new solar power facilities go? Solar energy is expected to take up to 5.7 million acres, or land equal to 0.3 percent of the U.S. land surface. Combining existing farms with solar power plants is an smart option, as it would help leverage existing energy infrastructure and increase efficiency of land use.

To explore the future of renewable energy and agriculture, the National Renewable Energy Laboratory (NREL) is seeking submissions for its agrivoltaics design competition. The goal of the competition is to design new ways to integrate solar power into both rural and urban agricultural landscapes. Design concepts are also meant to help solve “community sustainability challenges across the food-energy-water nexus.”

According to NREL, agrivoltaics is a term for combining agriculture and solar photovoltaic (PV) technologies in the same land. But it’s also much more than that. “These systems prioritize food production, ecosystem services, farm viability, local community values, land use efficiency, and energy generation to increase the sustainability and shared value of solar development.” The Laboratory states that “inclusive and holistic system design” is needed to bring all these elements together.

Agrivoltaic farm / istockphoto.com, Jenson

Already, some 2.8 gigawatts of agrivoltaics exist across the U.S. Many combine solar energy with pollinator habitat and sheep grazing.

Agrivoltaic farm / istockphoto.com, Miropa

NREL is looking for new design proposals that:

“Thoughtfully integrate solar PV facilities into agricultural landscapes while also optimizing agricultural productivity, energy generation, and engagement.

Address all aspects of the food-energy-water nexus, particularly in optimizing agricultural and energy outputs while minimizing freshwater use.

Are adaptable to different geographies with similar climatic conditions.

Include novel approaches to engage local communities and stakeholders on food and energy generation in the same land, including long-term food security

considerations.”

The Laboratory has selected three sites that offer different sizes and contexts:

Cattle Grazing / Commodity Crop Farming, 200 hectares (500 Acres) in Weld County, Colorado

Fruit Production / Orchard / Viticulture, 8 hectares (20 Acres), Mesa County, Colorado

Urban Farm / Rooftop Farm / Small Farm, 2 hectares (5 Acres), Denver County, Colorado

NREL invites graduate and undergraduate landscape architecture students to participate, ideally as part of a transdisciplinary team of no more than four people. Winning student teams for each of the three sites will receive $2,000-$3,000.

Two landscape architecture professors are among the jury:

Dr. Jody Beck, Landscape Architecture Department, College of Architecture and Planning, University of Colorado Denver

Jane Choi, Department of Horticulture & Landscape Architecture, Colorado State University

The winning teams will also present their work to an international audience of renewable energy policymakers in Denver, Colorado, June 11-13. All teams will showcase their projects in poster format at a showcase.

Registration deadline is March 29 and the submission deadline is May 10.

02/05/2024

ASLA 2023 Student Collaboration Award of Excellence. On the Edge: A Climate Adaptive Park for the Battleship NC Memorial. Wilmington, North Carolina. Marguerite Kroening, Student ASLA; Stella Wang, Student ASLA; Faculty Advisors: Andrew Fox, FASLA; David Hill. North Carolina State University / Marguerite Kroening

ASLA is now accepting submissions for its 2024 Student Award Program.

Registration deadline: Friday, May 3, 2024

Submission deadline: Friday, May 24, 2024

The ASLA Awards Program is the oldest and most prestigious in the landscape architecture profession. They honor the most innovative landscape architecture projects and the brightest ideas from up-and-coming landscape architecture students.

ASLA bestows Student Awards in General Design, Residential Design, Urban Design, Analysis and Planning, Communications, Research, Student Community Service, and Student Collaboration.

The 2024 Student Awards Jury includes:

Jury 1: General Design, Residential Design, Urban Design & Student Collaboration

Chair Jury 1: Aida Curtis, FASLA, Curtis+Rogers Design Studio

Members:

Charles Anderson, FASLA, Charles Anderson Landscape Architecture

Bill Estes, ASLA, MIG, Inc.

David Ferguson, ASLA, Ball State University

Drake Fowler, ASLA, The North Carolina Arboretum

Pamela Palmer, ASLA, ARTECHO Architecture & Landscape Architecture

May So, Intl Associate AIA, Mithun

Lauren Stimson, ASLA, Stimson Studio

Jury 2: Analysis & Planning, Research, Communications, & Student Community Service

Chair Jury 2: Dalton LaVoie, ASLA, Stantec

Members:

Ignacio Lòpez Busòn, ALSA, University of Oregon

Thomas Balsley, FASLA, SWA/Balsley

Travis Brooks, ASLA Brooks Landscape Architecture

Ashley Clark, Associate AIA, LandDesign

Seth Hendler-Voss, ASLA, Prince William County

Raymond Senes, ASLA, Cal Poly, Pomona

Kate Tooke, ASLA, Agency Landscape + Planning

01/29/2024

ASLA 2023 Professional General Design Honor Award. Grand Junction Park and Plaza, Westfield, Indiana. DAVID RUBIN Land Collective / Alan Karchmer

ASLA is now accepting submissions for its 2024 Professional Award Program.

Registration deadline: February 23

Submission deadline: March 15

The ASLA Awards Program is the oldest and most prestigious in the landscape architecture profession. They honor the most innovative landscape architecture projects and the brightest ideas from up-and-coming landscape architecture students.

ASLA bestows Professional Awards in General Design, Residential Design, Urban Design, Analysis & Planning, Communications, and Research categories. In each of these categories, juries select a number of Honor Awards and may select one Award of Excellence.

The ASLA / International Federation of Landscape Architects (IFLA) Global Impact Award is presented to a project in the Analysis and Planning category that demonstrates excellence in landscape architecture by addressing climate impacts through transformative action, scalable solutions, and adherence to ASLA’s and IFLA’s climate action commitments.

In addition, the Landmark Award is bestowed upon a distinguished landscape architecture project completed between 15 and 50 years ago that retains its original design integrity and contributes many benefits to the surrounding community.

The 2024 Professional Awards Jury includes:

Jury 1: General Design, Residential Design, Urban Design & Landmark Award

Chair Jury 1: Jennifer Nitzky, FASLA, Studio HIP

Members:

Michelle Delk, FASLA, Snohetta

Kyle Fiddelke, FASLA, OJB

John Gendall, NYC Architectural

Devon Henry, Hon ASLA, Team Henry Enterprises, LLC

Marc Miller, ASLA, Penn State

Chelina Odbert, Hon. ASLA, Kounkuey Design Initiative

Michele Shelor, ASLA, Colwell Shelor LA

Lance Thies, ASLA, City of Rockport

Jury 2: Analysis & Planning ASLA / IFLA Global Impact Award, Research, Communications & Landmark Award

Chair Jury 2: Glenn LaRue Smith, FASLA, PUSH Studio LLC

Members:

Luis Gonzalez, ASLA, EYA, LLC

Anyeley Hallova, Adre Development

Rebecca Leonard, ASLA, Lionheart Studio

Frank Edgerton Martin, Frank Edgerton Martin

Mary Pat McGuire, ASLA, University of Illinois

Ramon Murray, FASLA, Murray Design Group

Marion Pressley, FASLA, Pressley Associates

Darneka Waters, ASLA, Mecklenburg County Park and Recreation

IFLA Representative: Monica Pallares, IFLA America Region

CELA Representative: Dongying Li, Texas A&M University

LAF Representative: Austin Allen, ASLA, University of Texas at Arlington

Student Awards information will be released by early February.

01/24/2024

Women-led community planning session in Kibera, Nairobi / Kounkuey Design Initiative (KDI)

“We are focused on creating a just public realm,” said Chelina Odbert, Hon. ASLA, CEO and founding principal of Kounkuey Design Initiative (KDI), at the National Building Museum in Washington, D.C. And by just, “we mean free, inclusive, accessible, unbiased, and equitable.”

“A just public realm is open to everyone.” There is unlimited access to streets and public spaces so people can travel to school and work and be full members of their communities.

Unfortunately, the public realm is instead often “intimidating, exclusionary, inaccessible, unjust, and inequitable” for many women, LGBTQIA+ people, people with disabilities, and people of color.

Landscape architects, planners, and others need to understand who feels safe and comfortable in the public realm or there is a risk of perpetuating inequalities, Odbert argued.

Odbert met a single mother in an informal settlement who didn’t feel safe walking to work, so she had to work locally. This limited her economic opportunities.

She knows a transgender woman who didn’t feel safe riding the bus to university so had to pay extra for taxis. The extra cost became a burden so she quit classes.

A woman with stroller for her child couldn’t access a local planning meeting so didn’t attend.

Lack of access compounds issues, causing broader social and economic impacts.

For centuries, urban planning has has dominated by white men. The lack of a gendered perspective has led to many inequitable decisions about urban form, Odbert said.

“Work places are at the center of the city. Households on the periphery. Transportation systems were built for men’s commutes to city centers and back, not for women’s journeys.”

“Women have also been told they don’t belong in public planning meetings. They have been excluded. Women may choose to withdraw rather than participate. As a result, equity and prosperity is limited.”

To combat this, KDI has applied a gender-inclusive planning and design approach to its public space and transportation projects in the U.S. and worldwide. The organization received the Cooper-Hewitt 2022 National Design Award for Landscape Architecture for this work.

In Kibera, one of the largest informal settlements in Kenya, 300,000 people live in a space the size of Central Park. “There is lack of access to clean water and sanitation. There is food insecurity. And there’s non-existent public space,” Odbert said.

KDI knew that any public space in such a dense community would need to be a multi-use, multi-functional public space. For example, shade structures were designed to also be laundry racks.

Kibera Public Space Project / Kounkuey Design Initiative (KDI)

Using an inclusive process led by women, KDI and the community co-designed and co-built a dynamic public space that is equally as accessible to women, men, and children.

Kibera Public Space Project / Kounkuey Design Initiative (KDI)

“This is what happens when women have decision-making power. They create spaces that are good for women and everybody else,” she said.

Kibera Public Space Project / Kounkuey Design Initiative (KDI)

Women continue to maintain the space, and local politicians now call on them when they need to reach the community. “The space catalyzed cultural shifts.”

In another project in Kibera, the women of the community and KDI redesigned a dangerous bridge, creating a new green thoroughfare.

It’s now fully accessible to residents, offers space to sell goods, and racks to hang laundry. It saves neighborhood women time because they no longer need to walk their children to school and back through a muddy, garbage-strewn pathway.

Kibera Green Street (Before) / Kounkuey Design Initiative (KDI)

Kibera Green Street (After) / Kounkuey Design Initiative (KDI)

In La Favorita Mendoza, Argentina, KDI focused on gender equity in a community-led redesign process. With support from the World Bank, Argentina has been upgrading its public realm nationwide.

KDI identified that one park — Plaza Aliar — was a “no-go zone.” It was unsafe due its large scale and exposure and the pathways to the park were “too raw.” Given men would drink there, it also discouraged women and their children from going to the park. “It wasn’t designed for women.”

Developing six potential designs with community members, the team looked at how to weave in multiple uses.

The park, which was completed in 2022, now includes a playground, amphitheater, and community center that extends into the park. “It’s well-used and well-loved.”

Plaza Aliar, La Favorita Mendoza, Argentina / Kounkuey Design Initiative (KDI)

Plaza Aliar, La Favorita Mendoza, Argentina / Kounkuey Design Initiative (KDI)

At the same time, KDI also looked at the broader public realm — the transportation systems to Plaza Aliar.

They found that buses were overcrowded and “hot spots for sexual assaults and harassment.” Inadequate street lighting also created a sense of “real and perceived danger.”

Bus stops were reimagined to include bathrooms, kiosks, and a lending library — all uses that would add more people and increase safety.

In their work on mobility infrastructure, KDI found that “men use direct, longer routes, while women take shorter trips, with multiple stops at the grocer’s, childcare, and some times the same destinations multiple times per day.”

“Women therefore spend more than men do on transportation because of transfers. They need to use less efficient modes of transit. They also face a greater risk of harassment. In many places, travel is inefficient and dangerous experience for women. The lack of access can have generational ripple effects,” Odbert said.

In Eastern Coachella Valley of California, KDI has been working on a network of “purpose-built public spaces,” including the Nuestro Lugar Park, and public transportation systems to access these spaces.

Nuestro Lugar Park / Kounkuey Design Initiative (KDI)

“We can create a new park, but how do you get there?” They found that gender-focused neighborhood mobility plans were needed to ensure equitable access.

Through a community design process, sidewalks were removed from the exposed right of way and instead designed to be wider, multi-modal, and meandering. “What they wanted was surprising, and this is what happens when you bring other voices and genders into the process.”

Women from the community also led the process of designing shade structures for Eastern Coachella Valley bus stops. “They became the public face of the stops — and media darlings.”

Shade structure for Eastern Coachella Valley / Kounkuey Design Initiative (KDI)

Shade structure for Eastern Coachella Valley / Kounkuey Design Initiative (KDI)

Odbert ended her lecture by describing the Handbook for Gender-Inclusive Urban Planning and Design, a report created by KDI for the World Bank. “It’s our most ambitious project to date.”

Handbook for Gender-Inclusive Urban Planning and Design / World Bank, Kounkuey Design Initiative (KDI)

The handbook tackles the gaps between policy and practice. It provides best practice guidelines that answers the questions: “What is gender inclusion? How can we make it happen? What level of housing and parks are needed? How does urban planning and design fit in?”

Odbert hopes to build on the handbook and create new resources that cover “what is catalytic for community groups, city governments, and national governments.”

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