| Analysis and Planning Category Recognizes: the wide variety  of professional activities that lead to, guide, and evaluate landscape  architecture design. Entries in this category are not  required to be built or implemented.  Typical entries  include: urban, suburban, rural, or regional planning efforts; development  guidelines; transportation planning, town planning, or campus planning; plans for  recovery or reclamation of brownfield sites; environmental planning in relation  to legislative or policy initiatives or regulatory controls; cultural resource  reports; cultural and natural resources protection, conservation, or historic  preservation planning; and more.  Criteria: The jury will  consider the quality of the analysis and planning effort; context;  environmental sensitivity and sustainability; likelihood of successful implementation;  and value to the client, the public, and other designers.  Recognition: The Professional  Awards Jury and The Student Awards Jury may each select one Award of Excellence  and any number of Honor Awards in this category.  Entry  Instructions Entrants in this  category will submit: Official Entry  Binder
 Upon receipt of the entry form and payment, ASLA  will issue an official, numbered entry binder for each project to be  submitted. Each entry kit contains a submission binder, forms, and  instructions. All submission materials must fit into this binder, which  contains 24 page views in an 8.5” x 11” format. The jury will not consider any  material that is oversized, behind other items, or submitted outside the binder,  and will not remove any materials from the sleeves (such as pamphlets or  brochures).
 Materials in the  binder must not reveal the names of the entrant and/or landscape  architects, firms, other designers, students, schools, photographers, etc.  Entrants must use an easily readable typeface,  such as Times Roman, Garamond, or Arial, no smaller than 10-point size, for all  text.  Binder covers may not be altered in any manner.  Entry binders in  the Analysis and Planning Category must contain the following items: 1.    Descriptive Data Summary: The first three (3) views of the Entry Binder must include a descriptive  data summary of up to three (3) typed pages.   Please use the appropriate form provided for Professionals and for Students. 2.  Site  Plan: The fourth view of the  Entry Binder should be a simple site plan to give the jurors context of the  entire project. It should be in 8.5” x 11” format, landscape or portrait  orientation. 3. Drawings and  Photographs*: Include at  least five (5) but no more than fifteen (15) total drawings and/or photographs  of the project. Drawings and photographs must be 8.5” x 11” format, portrait  or landscape orientation. Brief captions of no more than 40 words each may  be placed on each photo page.   Concealed  Identification and Credit Form
 Please list all project credits on the Concealed  Identification and Credit Form.
 CD-ROM 
 The CD-ROM must contain the contents of the official entry binder and the  Concealed Identification and Credit form as submitted to the awards  program. Text documents must be in a word processing application (such as  rich text format, MS Word, WordPerfect, WordPad), not a portable  document format (.PDF) file. Photographs and drawings must be in .jpg format at  a minimum of 300 ppi (pixels per inch). Label each image with the entry number  and the number of the image. For example, if the entry number is “123,” label  the .jpg files as 123-01, 123-02, 123-03, and so on. Please label the CD-ROM  jewel case with the entry number.
 *Entrants  are responsible for clearing photographs with photographers for publication and  reproduction by ASLA. ASLA will provide proper photography and other  project credits when using photos, but will not assume responsibility for any  copyrights or photography fees.  ASLA  retains the right to publish photos submitted in winning entries in Landscape  Architecture magazine, on the ASLA  web site, in promoting the awards program, and in other products in conjunction  with promoting landscape architecture.  Back to Top^ |