Shlomo Aronson

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Shlomo Aronson is a landscape architect who was born and currently lives and works in Israel but was educated in the United States. The majority of his projects are located in Israel, although his firm has worked on projects in Canada, Japan, Iran, China, Italy, and Egypt [1]. His works range in scale from master plans for reforestation in Israel to archaeological parks to freeway planting schemes to urban plazas.

Contents

[edit] Life and Career

[edit] Early Years and Education

Shlomo Aronson was born on November 27, 1936 in Haifa, Israel. Aronson moved to the United States to study landscape architecture as an undergraduate student and received his Bachelor of Landscape Architecture (BLA) from the University of California, Berkeley in 1963. He went on to study at the Harvard Graduate School of Design where he received his Master of Landscape Architecture in 1966.

[edit] Academic Experience

Aronson has taught at a number of academic institutions since receiving his degrees from the University of California, Berkeley and Harvard.

[edit] Professional Experience and Associations

Prior to receiving his masters degree, Aronson worked in Lawrence Halprin’s office in San Francisco, California from 1963-1965. The field of landscape architecture was developing at this time to include large scale projects that incorporated transportation and community planning. In his foreword to “Making Peace with the Land,” Halprin recognized Aronson’s desire to work on larger scale projects and his interest in their “social context and the impact they world have on society.” [1] Aronson was part of The Architects' Collaborative in Cambridge Massachusetts in 1966 and The Greater London Council, Architecture Department from 1966-67. Aronson joined the City Engineer’s Department in Jerusalem in 1968. In 1969, Aronson become the owner and director of Shlomo Aronson and Associates, a multi-disciplinary office that includes landscape architects, architects, and urban planners in Jerusalem, Israel. Aronson was also the Chairman of the Israel Associates of Landscape Architects from 1991 to 1998 [2].

[edit] Projects

Aronson’s work includes a number of disciplines that are within or related to landscape architecture. His portfolio includes projects that fall into the categories of landscape planning, archaeological parks, national and regional planning, urban planning, architecture, historical preservation, landscape architecture, and transportation and engineering [3].

[edit] Landscape Planning

  • Landscape master plan for the city of Eilat
  • Landscape master plan for the city of Carmiel
  • Landscape master plan for the city of Nazareth
  • Landscape master plan for the city of Hod HaSharon
  • The Lowest Park on Earth Dead Sea
  • Master plan for the Yatir Forest
  • Landscape consultant for the residential extension of Beer Sheva, which will contain 25,000 housing units
  • Master plan for Jerusalem's green belt
  • Beit Govrin National park
  • Hof Hasharon National park
  • Rehabilitation plan for the 3000 acre "Burnt Forest" on the western approach to Jerusalem.

[edit] Archaeological Parks

  • Archaeological park around the southern wall of the Old City (Jerusalem), preservation of antiquities, landscaping, roads and parking areas
  • Kidron Valley - Yad Avshalom, Jerusalem’s "Biblical Park”
  • Beit-Goverin, archaeological national park
  • Ceasaria - Hippodrome area, the Old Port and the Old City

[edit] National and Regional Planning

  • National master plan of afforestation (with Motti Kaplan and Ilan Beeri)
  • Master plan for the Judean Hills region
  • Negev tourist development plan
  • Modi'in regional master plan
  • Master Plan for the entire country (one of five authors), in charge of open spaces and physical appearance

[edit] Urban Planning

  • Mevasseret Zion, a new suburban township (Jerusalem area), 4000 housing units
  • Master plan for Jerusalem southwest
  • New town near Beit Shemesh, 40,000 housing units, joint venture with architect David Reznik
  • Lavon, an industrial, educational and residential complex
  • Ceasaria Bay, layout of four residential neighborhoods
  • Beit Shemesh, new neighborhood, 2500 housing units, (with Yair Avigdor)

[edit] Architecture

  • The Cardo market and residential area in the Jewish Quarter
  • Ness Harim Swimming pool and restaurant complex in Judean Hills
  • Talpiot center, 200 residential units plus 20 shops in Jerusalem
  • Thirty-seven town houses in Mevaseret Zion
  • Orchidea Hotel, Eilat
  • Restaurant in the Jerusalem Hass Promenade with Lawrence Halprin
  • Restaurant in the Jerusalem Hass Promenade with Kurtis-Groag

[edit] Historical Preservation

[edit] Landscape Architecture

[edit] Transportation and Engineering

[edit] Work Outside Israel

  • Iran - Arya Mehr - Iran National Botanical Garden, water fixtures and system, 1975
  • Canada - Jerusalem garden and pavilion, Montreal Expo, 1981
  • Japan - Osaka Expo, the Israeli Garden. Awards: The Best Prize, Honor Prize and two Gold Medals, 1990
  • China - The Israeli Garden. Awards The Silver Medal for design, 1999.
  • Italy - La Selva master plan for recreation and tourism, 1200 acre site next to Rome, with three pilot projects, 1990-91
  • Egypt - Suma Bay master plan and landscape consultant for a 12 square kilometer resort including 19 hotels, 410 villas and an 18 hole golf course complex on the Red Sea, 1992

[edit] Awards

  • Ben Gurion Airport, Cross Israel Highway
  • 1989 Pfefferman Prize
  • 1990 Rechter Prize
  • 1990 The Gold Medal, and Best Design Award, Osaka Expo
  • 1991 Represented Israel in the International Biennale in Venice, for Sherover Promenade
  • 1991 Beautiful Israel Prize
  • 1995 Designer of the Year (with David Resnik) for Mivnim for the master plan of Beit Shemesh
  • 1995 Excellence in Communication, Landscape Architectural Magazine
  • 1996 Represented Israel in the International Biennale in Venice, for Shaar Hagai Interchange, Nazareth
  • 1998 Karavan Prize
  • 1998 Architects and Town Planners Award Prize
  • 1999 Silver medal for design, Kunming, China Expo
  • 2000 Jerusalem Prize for Architecture
  • 2001 Distinguished Alumnus Award, University of California, Berkeley
  • 2005 General Design Award of Honor, American Society of Landscape Architects, for the Ben Gurion International Airport, Lod, Israel

[edit] Design Philosophy

Aronson’s work is characterized by its attention to moral and historical issues of place and culture. His designs recognize both cultural and environmental relationships at the scale of the region and the site. Aronson incorporates a modern aesthetic into an ancient landscape. Lawrence Halprin, Aronson’s former employer and mentor, remarks that “In many ways [Aronson’s] attitudes and his process have transcended questions of detailed design. I believe his work must be judged on a far larger basis-that of concept, basic philosophy, and the significant role that landscape architecture can play in determining the character and quality, not only of Israel, but also of our world and of the future.” [2]

Another characteristic common to Aronson’s work is his use strategic use of materials, from plant selection and placement that reference agricultural traditions[3] to forms that recall symbols of the various religions practiced within the region[4]. Peter Jacobs explains that “the form and materials of [Aronson’s] projects are derived from a careful reading of the natural and cultural history of the landscape, an understanding of the urban place as much as the rural countryside.” [5]

[edit] Notes

  1. ^ Aronson, 1998, p7
  2. ^ Aronson, 1998, p7
  3. ^ Loon, 2007, p28, 30-32
  4. ^ Bennett, 2000, p60-67
  5. ^ Aronson, 1998, p11

[edit] References

  • Aronson, Shlomo. Shlomo Aronson: Making Peace with the Land: Designing Israel's Landscape. Washington, D.C: Spacemaker Press, 1998.
  • Aronson, Shlomo, and Barbara Aronson. "Ben Gurion International Airport in Lod." Topos: the international review of landscape architecture and urban design 53 (2005): 60-4.
  • Bennett, Paul. "Habitable Image: A Network of Promenades Defines a Country's Past, Points Toward its Future [Jerusalem]." Landscape Architecture 90.5 (2000): 60-7.
  • Helphand, Kenneth I. Dreaming Gardens : Landscape Architecture and the Making of Modern Israel. Santa Fe, NM: Center for American Places, 2002.
  • Loon, Leehu. "Abstracting the Israeli Landscape: This Garden Well Expresses the Landscape of Israel, without Political References - Too Bad most Visitors Can't Find it." Landscape Architecture 97.3 (2007): 28, 30-2.
  • SHLOMO ARONSON-Landscape Architects, Town Planners and Architects, Israel. 1/31/2008 <http://www.s-aronson.co.il/>.

[edit] External Links

[edit] Further Reading

  • Ben-Ari, Eyal, and Yoram Bilu, eds. Grasping Land: Space and Place in Contemporary Israeli Discourse and Experience. Albany: State University of New York Press, 1997.
  • Flantz, Richard and Daphne Raz, eds. Point of View: Four Approaches to Landscape Architecture in Israel. Tel Aviv: The Genia Schreiber University Art Gallery Tel Aviv University, 1996.
  • Selin, Helaine, ed. Nature Across Cultures: Views of Nature and the Environment in Non-Western Cultures. Dordrecht; Boston: Kluwer Academic Publishers, 2003.