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Richard Weller is an Australian landscape architect and academic. He is Professor and former Chair of Landscape Architecture at the University of Pennsylvania in Philadelphia, having succeeded James Corner in 2013.[1] Weller also holds the Martin and Margy Meyerson Chair of Urbanism at the University of Pennsylvania,[2] is on the board of directors of the Landscape Architecture Foundation, Washington D.C.,[3] and is Creative Director of the award-winning LA+ Interdisciplinary Journal of Landscape Architecture.[4] He was formerly a Winthrop Professor of Landscape Architecture at the University of Western Australia,[5] and director of the Australian Urban Design Research Centre (AUDRC).[6][7] He has received a number of awards for teaching excellence including a 2012 national citation "for sustained commitment to inspiring and enabling students to engage creatively and critically with complex design problems".[8] In 2017, and again in 2018, Weller was named by DesignIntelligence as one of the "25 most-admired educators" based on a comprehensive survey across the US design industry. "Weller demonstrates an intense engagement and commitment to students' academic and professional careers", according to the report. "He is advancing the profession through a critical look at past and current issues in ecology and design . . . shows humility and humanity in a challenging profession, and has the ability to always call us back to the biggest ideas that design needs to address."[9][10] In 2020, Weller was inducted into the Academy of Fellows of the Council of Educators in Landscape Architecture (CELA).[11] In 2023, Weller received the inaugural LAF Legacy Award from the Landscape Architecture Foundation in Washington D.C.[12] In 2024 he received the President’s Award from the Australian Institute of Landscape Architecture “in recognition of his distinguished career as a globally renowned landscape architect, urbanist, and academic.”
Weller is a landscape architect and former co-director (with Vladimir Sitta) of Australian landscape architecture firm Room 4.1.3. whose built projects include the "Garden of Australian Dreams"[13] at the National Museum of Australia in Canberra, ACT. The built garden attracted controversy for its radical design.[14][15] He was also part of the original design team for the Elizabeth Quay project in Perth, Western Australia.[16][17]
Weller's design work has been exhibited in the Museum of Contemporary Art in Sydney (1998) as a finalist in the Seppelt Contemporary Art Awards.[18] His work has also been exhibited at the Venice Biennale (2004, 2021), the MAXXI Gallery in Rome (2016), the Isabella Stewart Gardner Museum in Boston (2017), the Canadian Design Museum in Toronto (2018), and the Guggenheim Museum in New York (2020) as part of the "Countryside, The Future" exhibition curated by Rem Koolhaas. Weller exhibited as an invited participant in the central pavilion at the 2021 Venice Biennale di Architettura curated by Hashim Sarkis, at the 2022 Architecture Biennale Rotterdam, and at CAFA in Beijing (2023).[19][20]
In 2002 Weller's design was selected as a finalist in the Pentagon Memorial competition in Washington, D.C.[21] and in 2005 he was a finalist in the Tsunami Memorial competition in Thailand.[22] His early work (1990 to 1995) as consultant to Berlin landscape architecture firm Muller, Knippschild Wehberg (now Lützow 7) was heavily awarded in European design competitions.[23]
Weller’s most recent projects include the Hotspot Cities Project,[24] which maps conflict zones between urban growth and biodiversity, and the World Park Project, which proposes three recreational trails and related landscape restoration at a planetary scale.[25] Weller’s earlier work on urbanization and critical threats to biodiversity, “Atlas for the End of the World,”[26] was published in National Geographic[27] and Scientific American.[28]
Weller gave the Frederick Law Olmsted Memorial Lecture at the Harvard Graduate School of Design in 2011,[29] and many invited lectures and addresses including at Milano Architecture Week (Milan, 2019),[30] the first World Forum on Urban Forests (Mantova, 2018),[31] and to the UN Secretariat of the Convention on Biological Diversity (Montreal, 2017). He is a regular commentator on planning and design issues.[32][33] He is author of numerous books and over 100 single-authored papers. His publications include:
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