Memory investigates the profound relationship between landscape, remembrance, and human experience. Landscapes have the unique ability to hold stories, preserve cultural identity, and evoke personal and collective memories. Whether through memorials and commemorative spaces, the retention of historic features, or subtle design interventions that encourage reflection, designers can create environments that resonate far beyond their physical form. This lecture explores how memory can inform the design process, shaping places that connect past, present, and future. Through a range of international case studies, it considers how landscapes can become repositories of meaning, enabling individuals and communities to reflect, remember, and strengthen their relationship with place and history.
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