Both capilalist globalization and modern technology have tended to produce placeless environments which lack the diversity and richness of place experience and profound meaning. How to avoid placelessness and create unique, regional, and meaningful places within the contemporary globalization context has become a great challenge for landscape architects, and in fact, for all environmental designers. This study examines four landscape design projects in Boston and its vicinity, which were designed by four leading American landscape architects--Frederick Law Olmsted, Sr., Laurie Olin, Peter Walker, and Martha Schwartz--to see what kind of place they created, how successfully they addressed the issue of place, and what their design approaches ...