UNIVERSITY PARK, Pa. – Penn State landscape architecture students enrolled in the Studio III – Site Design class this fall were presented with a complex assignment right from the start: Design the site for a new 7.5-acre educational facility on the grounds of a National Historic Landmark that will serve not only as an example of design excellence, but also as a catalyst to unite the Southwest Philadelphia community.
The National Historic Landmark at the center of the project is Bartram’s Garden, the oldest surviving botanic garden in North America. Built in 1728, the garden occupies 45 acres along the west bank of the Schuylkill River and is operated by the John Bartram Association in cooperation with Philadelphia Parks and Recreation.
The educational initiative, called the Woodland Academy, will offer daycare and after-school programs that emphasize the importance of nature education and environmental preservation, which are areas of importance to both Bartram’s Garden and the Penn State Department of Landscape Architecture.
“There isn’t a prewritten script to follow with this project,” said Justin DiBerardinis, director of programs and partnerships for the John Bartram Association. “If we succeed in creating an equitable and environmentally sustainable riverfront in Southwest Philadelphia, it will be because we sought out and tested new ideas.”
“That’s why working with students on a project like this can be so rewarding,” he continued. “We don’t feel confined to what’s been done before but rather we see ideas that aren’t bound by orthodox thinking. Their designs and concepts expand our collaborative thinking and imagination of what could be.”
The Woodland facility will be physically connected to the community by the 56th Street Corridor, which is another focus for the students to address in their projects. The corridor will connect Woodland Academy to the Schuylkill River, the greater Southwest Philadelphia community and Bartram Village.
Bartram Village is a 500-unit apartment community that is currently being renovated, thanks to a $1.3 million federal grant that was issued to the Philadelphia Housing Authority in May 2018.
“This is a very complex design project for an experienced landscape architect to consider let alone for second-year students to address,” said Neil Korostoff, one of the class instructors.
Nevertheless, Korostoff, the students and fellow instructors Lisa DuRussel and Alec Spangler traveled to Philadelphia in September to meet with staff from Bartram’s Garden and planners of the Woodland Academy. The students spent time listening to the vision and goals for the project, explored the different aspects of the site and interacted with some local residents to get a feel for the culture and mindset of the community.