The roots of a distinct yet disparate movement in landscape and garden design in Southeast Asia
pág. 9
Hong Kong Housing
pág. 11
Progress in landscape architecture in Southeast Asia depends on weaving the needs of local cultures with commercial demands
pág. 15
Beijing's public landscapes are loaded with meaning, symbolism and history
pág. 19
Singapore's network of parks provides welcome contrast to its high-rise housing
pág. 21
Reclamation material for new land around Hong Kong has been mined from the island's hills
pág. 26
The design of a new park in Hong Kong, where fog billows through steel structures
pág. 29
How South Korean landscape elements fit into the capital city
pág. 31
The influence of English landscape design in a new country park in Mito City, Japan
pág. 32
Possible solutions to Tokyo's lack of public space
pág. 34
The design of a sculpture court in Malaysia's capital city
pág. 38
The work of Jia-hua Wu, a Chinese professor studying Eastern and Western approaches to landscape aesthetics
pág. 39
Woodlea Primary School, Hampshire, was designed as a clearing on a wooded hillside
pág. 43
A personal critique of the children's play provision at Woodlea Primary School
pág. 46
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