Kerb originated as an RMIT University pamphlet in 1989 for the purpose of critiquing and discussing the discourse of landscape architecture. Published annually, the journal now boasts a diverse selection of both international and local contributors, focusing on contemporary landscape architecture themes. The journal is unique in being compiled and edited each year by a small group of students, who select a range of articles pertinent to the dedicated theme of each edition. Kerb seeks to set the agenda for designers and landscape architects, establishing a platform for new ideas and contemporary design theory. Kerb is now featured on university reading lists around the world.Through the creation of place and the understanding of space, landscape architecture is able to solidify the intermediary.Kerb 22 interrogates the notion of remoteness from four viewpoints, identifying opportunities of engagement within spaces balancing on the edge of tangibility, or deeply virtually sited.This issue of Kerb aims to establish connectivity between the entities that lie within a greater territory, calling for the interrogation of space. Whether through the distribution of physical settlements or through the definition of virtual boundaries, mediating the divide places remoteness within a near-instantaneous reach; enabling us to grasp and employ the remote as a tool for spatial negotiation. EditorsJames Riley FrewEllie GrammelsbergerJessica Poole Jones hloe Street Hui-Chin TeeDuyen Vo Contributors Benjamin H. BrattonMond QuTiago Torres-CamposRyan DeweyAlex BreedonGross.Max Frances Edith CooperJosé Alfredo Ramirez / Clara OlórizPierre BélangerRene Van MeeuwenMichael LightCasey Lance Brown / Rob Holmes James RamseyJa Kyung KimWilliam Clancey Mario Accordino / Jarrad NewmanLateral OfficeNatalya Egon / Noel TurgeonNiki Kakali / Anastasia KotenkoIan StrangeJock GilbertShaun Gladwell
Thank you for visiting our website. Would you like to provide feedback on how we could improve your experience?
This site does not use any third party cookies with one exception — it uses cookies from Google to deliver its services and to analyze traffic.Learn More.