26 LANDSCAPE ARCHITECTURE CEOS: WE WILL BE A ZERO-EMISSIONS PROFESSION BY 2040, WORLD MUST ADDRESS CLIMATE CHANGE
“We as a species can no longer stand on the sidelines. It is the responsibility of every human to commit to some form of CLIMATE ACTION. As designers of our environment, OLIN is actively working toward a more resilient planet and enthusiastically endorses ALSA’s Climate Action Plan.”

Lucinda R. Sanders, Ed.D., FASLA
CEO and President of OLIN

OLIN’s Lucinda Sanders joined a group of 26 CEOs representing the world’s largest and most influential landscape architecture firms released a public letter committing their firms to achieve the goals laid out in the American Society of Landscape Architects Climate Action Plan, most notably a commitment to make landscape architecture a zero-emissions profession by 2040. The firms signing onto the letter have designed many of the most-visited parks, public plazas, stadium grounds, waterfronts, and transportation corridors across the United States and around the world, representing tens of billions of dollars of public and private infrastructure.

The letter reads in part: “Because we work so closely with land and water, landscape architects are natural leaders in designing climate-resilient communities—from stormwater management to green infrastructure to sustainable transportation to biodiversity conservation. Every day, we design nature-based solutions to help build communities that are more resilient to extreme weather, more equitable for everyone, and more supportive of human health and wellness.”

The letter expresses key business commitments: “We publicly and expressly endorse, support, and commit to the goals articulated in the American Society of Landscape Architects Climate Action Plan, which sets specific and extraordinarily ambitious goals for the profession of landscape architecture to become a zero-emission profession by 2040, including in our business operations, designed landscapes, and the materials and products used in our work.”

The businesses represented on the letter collectively do more than $350 million in revenues annually and lead or contribute to projects with more than $1 billion in construction value annually. Their work influences millions of acres in more than 50 countries every year.

“Leaders of more than two dozen top-tier firms that influence billions of dollars in infrastructure spending and millions of acres of land have just pledged to make their profession zero emissions by 2040—this is a really big deal,” said American Society of Landscape Architects CEO Torey Carter-Conneen. “These are people who have the skills and imagination to make it happen: They’re already designing resilient waterfronts, parks that soak up stormwater, and urban forests that take greenhouse gasses out of the atmosphere and cool our cities. Landscape architects know how to get it done. Every sector of the economy has to tackle climate resilience, and landscape architects will do their part.”

The CEOs called on governments, clients, and peers in the closing section of the letter, writing in part: “We call on our colleagues in allied disciplines to partner with us in designing and implementing solutions. We call on leaders in government at every level to prioritize resilience, emissions reductions, and human wellbeing in their policymaking. We call on our clients to be bold and curious as we design the future together.”

The full letter is available here.


OLIN is a design studio comprised of an enthusiastic team of landscape architects, planners, urban designers, and collaborators, based in Philadelphia, Chicago, and Los Angeles. Our work is predicated on developing innovative and tailored approaches to social engagement, environmental and social responsibility and justice, and financial and operational sustainability in the context of awe-inspiring and beautiful designs built with finesse and craft. Our award-winning projects cross boundaries of scale, typology, and site condition, yet are all driven by our central vision: To Create Places That Enhance Life. Furthering our deep belief in enhancing biodiversity and utilizing nature-based solutions, OLIN has made a commitment to address carbon reduction and climate action through our operations, practice, and advocacy. This ethos is embodied in OLIN’s leadership and advocacy in the field, advancing new tools for carbon calculation, developing and sourcing more sustainable materials, and translating learning directly into our practice.

We understand the need to constantly deepen our understanding of the complexities of our work, which we do through OLIN Labs. As a conduit between academia and practice, OLIN Labs recognizes the value of open dialogue and knowledge sharing among individuals with different expertise and methods but with common purpose.

Starting in 2023, OLIN Labs hosted programming aligned with global Climate Week, consisting of internal discussions with allied professionals advancing climate justice, biodiversity, the carbon economy, and sustainable materials. These conversations highlight synergies between fellow practitioners, academics, and researchers who are united in creating better solutions for planning and design that prioritize planetary survival; we aspire to accomplish this by reducing energy consumption, restoring and enhancing natural systems, building community resilience, conserving resources, fostering widespread economic prosperity, and improving quality of life outcomes, with the goal of inciting action and a collective future vision.

Connecting ideas to action, OLIN Labs declared 2024 to be the Year of Climate Action. Labs is incubating multiple initiatives that are advancing discrete climate themes, from communication, to metrics, to sustainable specifications.

From neighborhoods to cities to regions, planning for our collective future is part of our commitment to creating places that enhance life. At OLIN our team of planners and designers are leading some of the most innovative projects that bring together social, environmental, and economic resilience.

We know that planning excellence requires a community-driven and inclusive process so residents are meaningfully involved in deciding the future of their parks and cities. From our years of experience in park systems, river systems, infrastructural systems, long-range planning, resilience and climate planning, and park design and programming, we know that getting this right takes time and investment in the process. We create teams with a robust and sustained community leadership structure to guide the process, and policies, from end to end, involving community leaders at each step—to help spread the word, shape messaging, encourage participation, and ultimately shape the strategy itself. We strive to have a hyper-local approach to make sure we know a community’s leaders and unique characteristics, building trust and relationships that will allow us to work from a strong foundation.

We also understand that a plan is only as successful as its ability to integrate well with other policies, and to provide a runway for smooth implementation and transparent decision-making. This can only be achieved by creating substantial buy-in through the process. For that reason, we put emphasis and time into building trust through deep and meaningful conversations with communities—putting them in the driver’s seat rather than simply checking a box.

LEARN ABOUT SOME OF OUR RECENT BIG PLANS!

Caño Martín Peña Comprehensive Infrastructure Master Plan | San Juan, Puerto Rico
In San Juan, Puerto Rico, we worked with residents from the eight communities of the Caño Martín Peña District to develop a comprehensive infrastructure plan. This plan works to improve their collective health and quality of life through a holistic approach that incorporates nature-based strategies and climate change risk analysis while safeguarding the communities’ deep social bonds.

Sepulveda Basin Vision Plan | Los Angeles, CA
OLIN led the design and planning team for the once-in-a-generation opportunity to reimagine the the 2,000-acre Sepulveda Basin and improve the lives of millions of Angelinos.

The Sepulveda Basin Vision Plan (SBVP) which was released to the public in June of 2024, enhances natural systems, recreational and cultural programming, and climate resilience driven by community needs and priorities of adjacent climate vulnerable and disadvantaged communities.

Origin Park | Clarksville, IN
OLIN’s work on Origin Park seeks to restore this 400 acre site to be a connector and catalyst for surrounding Southern Indiana communities.

The park functions at a site level and regionally to be a model of a contemporary large urban park as a resilient, climate-adapted landscape that invites visitors to the dynamic power of nature and a layered cultural history through direct landscape experience.

Cleveland Parks & Recreation Plan | Cleveland, OH
OLIN led a groundbreaking citywide Parks and Recreation Plan for the City of Cleveland which serves as a guide to how the City can improve parks and recreation to better meet residents’ needs. This plan is the first to specifically use an equity-based prioritization framework for future city investments. The multi-faceted engagement process helped ensure that a representative sample of residents were heard and allowed areas of consensus to be found to identify the differing needs in different areas of the city.

As a foundation for developing the Parks and Recreation Plan, OLIN led a multifaceted engagement process. Open houses, mailed and online surveys, youth workshops, neighborhood meeting kits, and interviews were used to hear from residents what their concerns are and what they envision for the future.

LA River Master Plan Update | Los Angeles County, CA
In 2022 the LA River Master Plan was adopted by LA County as a blueprint for reimagining the LA River from single-use flood channel to multi-benefit publicly accessible open space and ecosystem. Check out Partner Jessica Henson on PBS Earth Focus talking about the 51-mile LA River. 

OLIN’s work on Sojourner Truth State Park for Scenic Hudson Wins ASLA Honor Award for Analysis and Planning

Sojourner Truth State Park in Ulster County, New York has received an Honor Award in Analysis and Planning from the 2024 cycle of American Society of Landscape Architects Professional Awards.

OLIN has had the excellent fortune of working with Scenic Hudson through a process of engagement and design, leading to the awarded Framework Plan as well as waterfront improvements at the State Park. 

The 520-acre park is on the Hudson, the site of a former extractive landscape that will transform to be a place for social and ecological revitalization—a model of resilience. It is aptly named for the 19th Century American abolitionist born into slavery in Ulster County and freeing herself to advocate for freedom, women’s rights, and justice for the formerly enslaved. 

Read more here: https://www.asla.org/2024awards/9251.html

Many thanks go to the Project Team!

Richard S. Roark, RLA, ASLA, LEED / SITES AP, Lead Partner
Marni Burns, RLA, ASLA, Partner
Nate Wooten, RLA, ASLA, RA, AIA, Lead Designer
Heather Blaikie, ASLA, Landscape Architect, Scenic Hudson
Sarah Pate, Designer
Kate Lawler, Visual Communications and Signage Design
eDesign Dynamics, Habitat Assessment, Stormwater, and Ecological Design
Hudsonia, Habitat Assessment
PennPraxis, Heritage Consultant
Matthew Baird Architects, Architect
Barretto Bay Strategies, Community Engagement and Economic Consultant
McLaren Engineering Group, Structural and Marine Engineering, and Permitting
Rave Consultants, Cost Consultant