Randolph T. Hester is a professor in the Department of Landscape Architecture and Environmental Planning at the University of California at Berkeley. Hester is also a sociologist, practicing landscape architect and co-director of Community Development by Design, a neighborhood planning organization focused on community participation and input.[1] Randolph Hester has also published a number of books central to the topic of designing neighborhoods, cities and landscapes; his most recent book Design for Ecological Democracy was published in September 2010.[2]
Biography
Hester grew up in rural North Carolina. He acquired a BA in Landscape Architecture and a BA in Sociology from North Carolina State University, and eventually went on to achieve an MA in Landscape Architecture at Harvard. Hester published his first book Neighborhood Space in 1975.[2]
Design for Ecological Democracy, Cambridge, Massachusetts: MIT Press, 2010. ISBN978-0-262-51500-9
Living Landscape: Reading Cultural Landscape Experiences, with S. Chang, S. Wang (Eds.), Taipei: Taiwan United Force Culture Enterprise Co. Ltd, 1999.
A Theory for Building Community, with S. Chang, Taipei: Yungliou Press, 1999.
Democratic Design in the Pacific Rim, with C. Kweskin (Eds.), Mendocino, California: Ridge Times Press, 1999.
Techniques for Machizukuri, with M. Dohi, Gendaikikakushitsu Press, 1997.
The Meaning of Gardens, with M. Fancis (Eds.), Cambridge, Massachusetts: MIT Press, 1990. ISBN978-0-262-56061-0
Community Design Primer, Mendocino, California: Ridge Times Press, 1990. ISBN978-0-934203-06-7
Community Goal Setting, with F.J. Smith, Stroudsburg, Pennsylvania: Dowden, Hutchinson and Ross Inc., 1982.
Planning Neighborhood Space with People, New York: Van Nostrand Reinhold Company, 1982. ISBN978-0-442-23223-8
Neighborhood Space, Stroudsburg, Pennsylvania: Dowden, Hutchinson and Ross Inc., 1975.
Further reading
Calkins, Meg (December 2002). "Closing the Loop Part II: Designing with, specifying, and using salvaged and reprocessed materials in the landscape". Landscape Architecture.
Owens-Viani, Lisa (July 2002). "Walkin' the Talk: A landscape architect and a planner create an urban garden that embodies their interest in a more sustainable lifestyle". Landscape Architecture.