There is a place of tranquility on the Temple
University Ambler campus where small groups students and faculty often
gather during the warmer months to study, plan class work, or simple take
a moment to "get away" from their busy day.
The Sustainable Wetland Garden, located on campus near the Widener
Building and Cottage Hall, is a working demonstration of sustainable
principles and management.
The wetland garden, the most recent addition to the Landscape Arboretum of
Temple University Ambler, was recently honored by the
Pennsylvania-Delaware Chapter of the American Society of Landscape
Architects (ASLA). It was presented with the ASLA Honor Award "for
outstanding professional design in the Landscape Architecture/Design Built
Category" and the prestigious "People's Choice" Award for 2002.
"It certainly is a wonderful honor to be recognized by your peers. More
importantly, it's wonderful to have this newest garden in the arboretum
receive this recognition," said S. Edgar David, an associate professor
of Landscape Architecture. "The project was selected from 25 submissions
from landscape architecture firms throughout Pennsylvania and Delaware.
The Virginia chapter of the ASLA juried the awards program."
Significant portions of what is now the Sustainable Wetland Garden began
as part of Temple University's 1997 entry in the Philadelphia Flower
Show. "The Green Machine," an exhibit detailing how created wetlands
could be used for cleaning wastewater, won Best of Show for that year in
the Academic Educational category. Temple again won Best of Show in the
Academic Educational category in 2002, the first time the Department of
Landscape Architecture and Horticulture had entered a competitive class
since 1997, for their detailed representation of "Green Roof Technology."
"After the 1997 Flower Show, students in the Design/Build Studio in the
Landscape Architecture curriculum spent the following two years - spring
1998 and 1999 - retrofitting the exhibit for the sustainable wetland
garden," David said. "They used the solar pergola, a wooden structure
that supports the solar photo-voltaic panels and creates a garden room
with a sense of enclosure. They also used the exposed cullet (recycled
glass) paving."
According to David, the solar panels utilize the sun's renewable energy
to power a pump that circulates the water in the central fountain to a
created aerial aqueduct.
"The garden is entirely made of native species and comprises several
diverse habitats. The wetland portion functions as a bio-filter - the
vegetation and microorganisms filter out pollution that is generated from
the surrounding buildings," he said. "The garden is a perfect
expression of the integration of architecture into the landscape. It is a
beautiful model of how the landscape can mitigate the detrimental impacts
of our built environment."
The garden is also an excellent reminder of the hard work students and
faculty put into its creation.
"For all of the students that worked on it as a Flower Show exhibit and
as the existing garden, it creates a legacy," he said. 'It is a
connection for our alumni to the campus and the University. To come back
and see their work appreciated by current students, it is a great
inspiration."
For more information on the Sustainable Wetland Garden and the other
gardens that comprise the Landscape Arboretum of Temple University Ambler,
call 215-283-1290.
CONTACT: James Duffy, (215) 283-1290, duffyj@mail.temple.edu,
release available by e-mail