A LANDSCAPE ARCHITECTURE GRADUATE THESIS FROM THE RHODE ISLAND SCHOOL OF DESIGN




draft thesis statement

Islands are terrain bound into a single landform by water--a boundary which is constantly shifting and dissolving in connection with ecological and cultural conditions. On an island, water both literally and metaphorically surrounds, even transcends, culture. On an island, water frames all natural processes and defines specific ecologies. At the same time, the bound condition defines a particular set of limits based on limited resources and rising sea levels. In order to be self-sustaining entities, natural and cultural processes must acknowledge a critical balance between where systems transcend the edge and where they are contained by it. In this regard the dynamic edge of the shoreline becomes a significant space for culture and ecologies where they are either held of released into their greater context.

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