Fresh Water is a book that addresses regional, territorial, and
continental water issues through interdisciplinary design research in
landscape architecture. The geographical and hydrosocial context of the
major inland (non-coastal) watersheds of the North American
continent--the Mississippi, the Great Lakes Basin-St. Lawrence and the
Nelson--remains an under-explored field for design research. Major
spatial, temporal, biological, and geological manipulations of water
bodies, systems, and flows raise critical questions about how to
redefine human-hydro relationships and to reverse the deterioration of
freshwater systems across the territory. Fresh Water assembles scholarly
papers from designers that reframe complex issues of industrial
agriculture, energy production, urban sewersheds, water law,
transportation tributaries, and cross-watershed diversions, to propose
new inland water futures. Design contributors interrogate the
institutional regime and control of inland water, integrating diverse
disciplinary knowledge to support multi-scalar interventions that
challenge land and water policy to consider a range of new and urgent
partnerships and projects this century.