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LA 22700 - Planting I: Creating Ecologically Connected Landscapes |
Credit Hours: 3.00. Review of design principles as related to plant design characteristics; design implications of plant responses to environment; review of landscape plants in fall.
0.000 OR 3.000 Credit hours Syllabus Available Levels: Undergraduate, Graduate, Professional Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Laboratory, Laboratory Preparation Offered By: College of Agriculture Department: Hort & Landscape Architecture Course Attributes: Lower Division May be offered at any of the following campuses: West Lafayette Learning Outcomes: 1. Apply knowledge of plant requirements and characteristics to the design of landscape spaces using plants and plant communities as the primary design material. 2. Construct appropriate plant palettes using both native and horticultural plants to build a cohesive sense of place, including a palette that is regionally appropriate to the Midwest. 3. Explore alternative solutions and use personal judgments to select plant combinations for technical, functional, and aesthetic uses in the landscape. 4. Distinguish the differences in garden styles and know the characteristics of each style. 5. Create a planting plan and schedule, incorporating appropriate nursery standards, and understand how these elements are part of the necessary construction documents for site construction. 6. Apply design process (site, inventory, analysis, concept, schematic, and master plan) to planting design. Prerequisites: (Undergraduate level LA 10600 Minimum Grade of D- or Undergraduate level LA 21600 Minimum Grade of D- [may be taken concurrently]) and Undergraduate level HORT 21700 Minimum Grade of D- |
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