The Los Angeles River will soon be the most popular river in America. But now, no one knows that it exists. This essay examines the fall of the Los Angeles River, the founding place of this urban metropolis. Through use of historical, scientific, and political accounts, I detail how the river was transformed from the life source of Los Angeles to a concrete flood control channel in the heart of the city. I also examine the proposed revitalization plans for the river and argue that these plans can transform Los Angeles from an environmentalist’s nightmare into a city with nature at its heart. I begin with a historical analysis of the city and the river. The first written account of the city was at the confluence of the Arroyo Seco and the Lo...
This dissertation explores how maps and architectural landscape renderings function as rhetorical de...
About 75% of the streams and rivers in Southern California are biologically degraded. Widespread dev...
Today\u27s urban riverfronts are changing. The decline of river commerce and riverside industry has ...
During the past decade, the L.A. River has become a subject of intense re-examination, a major topic...
When Los Angeles was founded in 1781, the mountains, river and shore formed the landscape. Today, st...
The flow of the Los Angeles River, ever precarious and never navigable, attracted settlement along i...
When Los Angeles was founded in 1781, the mountains, river and shore formed the landscape. Today, st...
Although better known for its sunny skies, Los Angeles suffers devastating flooding. This book explo...
The Los Angeles River is a highly significant waterway that flows approximately 51-miles through th...
Los Angeles rose to significance in the first half of the twentieth century by way of its complex re...
Looking at it today, it is hard to believe that the now-concrete river bed was once one of the regio...
UnrestrictedThe dynamic between the Los Angeles River and the humans living at its banks has changed...
Thesis (M.C.P.)--Massachusetts Institute of Technology, Dept. of Urban Studies and Planning, 2010.Ca...
This essay uses my students’ visit to the Los Angeles River and their written reflections as a narra...
The greater Los Angeles urban area is home to nearly 19 million people, but has local water resource...
This dissertation explores how maps and architectural landscape renderings function as rhetorical de...
About 75% of the streams and rivers in Southern California are biologically degraded. Widespread dev...
Today\u27s urban riverfronts are changing. The decline of river commerce and riverside industry has ...
During the past decade, the L.A. River has become a subject of intense re-examination, a major topic...
When Los Angeles was founded in 1781, the mountains, river and shore formed the landscape. Today, st...
The flow of the Los Angeles River, ever precarious and never navigable, attracted settlement along i...
When Los Angeles was founded in 1781, the mountains, river and shore formed the landscape. Today, st...
Although better known for its sunny skies, Los Angeles suffers devastating flooding. This book explo...
The Los Angeles River is a highly significant waterway that flows approximately 51-miles through th...
Los Angeles rose to significance in the first half of the twentieth century by way of its complex re...
Looking at it today, it is hard to believe that the now-concrete river bed was once one of the regio...
UnrestrictedThe dynamic between the Los Angeles River and the humans living at its banks has changed...
Thesis (M.C.P.)--Massachusetts Institute of Technology, Dept. of Urban Studies and Planning, 2010.Ca...
This essay uses my students’ visit to the Los Angeles River and their written reflections as a narra...
The greater Los Angeles urban area is home to nearly 19 million people, but has local water resource...
This dissertation explores how maps and architectural landscape renderings function as rhetorical de...
About 75% of the streams and rivers in Southern California are biologically degraded. Widespread dev...
Today\u27s urban riverfronts are changing. The decline of river commerce and riverside industry has ...