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Overview of River Restoration Studies at UCB
The University of California faculty and
students have been actively involved in
environmental planning and restoration for
nearly four decades. In 1973, Luna Leopold
started Hydrology for Planners, a foundation
course for environmental planning students
pursing restoration studies, and the course
has been offered annually since. Over the years, restoration-related courses have been taught by Alex Horne, Kara Nelson, Vince Resh, Adina Merelender, Don Ermin, and Mary Power, and students have pursued river-restoration-related research in programs such as Civil Engineering, Environmental Planning, Environmental Sciences, EPS, ERG, ESPM, Geography, Integrated Biology, and Landscape Architecture.
The Department of Landscape Architecture
and Environmental Planning has been
active in teaching and research related to
restoration since the 1960's, with early GIS
planning in the Lake Tahoe Basin (which
provided the basis for current regulatory and
restoration programs). The Department has
offered two courses devoted to stream
restoration for over a decade. Restoration
of Rivers and Streams (LA 227) emphasizes
restoration principles, research, and post
project appraisal. Ecological Factors in
Urban Design (LA 201) is a studio course in
which students conduct inventory, analysis,
and develop plans and designs for river
corridors. In addition, other courses offered
across campus, as well as dissertations and theses, offer
further opportunity to engage restoration
from a range of disciplinary viewpoints.
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