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Beyond Noise and Silence: Auditory Qualities as Landscape Values

Landscape sounds. Sounds are an intrinsic dimension of human environmental relatedness. While contemporary urban landscape planning practice focuses only on the defensive treatment of unwanted sounds, we should rather prepare for the active design of acoustic qualities for public spaces, which become increasingly important. Through fieldwork-based study, culminating in experimental landscape miking and mixing methods that enable sensory experience and design experimentation, the doctoral study Cultivating Sound – The Acoustic Dimension of Landscape Architecture elucidates and makes tangible landscape-related attributes that are profoundly linked to sonic impressions, but concealed behind the abstract formulations of ‹noise› and ‹silence›.

With the development of landscape-specific recording and mixing techniques, this research redresses the lack of acoustic dimension in common landscape thinking, and the respective analysis and design tools. It investigates auditory landscape space, based on a combination of case studies with contemporary psychoacoustic knowledge that goes beyond what is commonly considered in environmental and architectural acoustics, notably from the fields of music and audio engineering. It shows that there is not one homogeneous auditory space, but rather a dynamic blend arising from the interplay between a more general sonic ambience and different spatialities formed by mixtures of distinct sounds. In order to transfer such insights to strategies for the integration of sound in contemporary landscape analysis and design, the development of appropriate tools and techniques is indispensable.

Field Work Methods Inspired by Orchestra Recording

Cultivating Sound experiments on a novel landscape specific recording approach, inspired by established orchestra recording methods, that combines an environmental reference microphone with situationally positioned source microphones, and allows for a dynamical restitution of the sonic landscape experience. This approach moves on from the notion of soundscape coined in the 1960s, which evokes yet another scape, an auditory entity perceived from a single ideal listening position. Integrative rather than separative, plural rather than singular, it proposes to understand sound as an inherent dimension of landscape, an essentially multisensory, heterogeneous and shared listening field. Through audiovisual interplays between these sonic landscape reconstitutions and different forms of visual landscape representation and modelling, this approach is extended to an intersensory level.

Integration of multiple spatially recorded listening positions in an interactive point cloud model of the Shisen-do garden. Illustration: Nadine Schütz. Point Cloud Model: Matthias Vollmer.
Integration of multiple spatially recorded listening positions in an interactive point cloud model of the Shisen-do garden. Illustration: Nadine Schütz. Point Cloud Model: Matthias Vollmer.

This new field work method recreates auditory space and sonic landscape constellations in a typological way and delivers thus essential elements for a basic sonic landscape design vocabulary. The practical reconnection of sound and landscape, then, is a question of shared values. Sounds are an expression of life, incite wonder and surprise, bear spatial diversity and belonging – all these are values and desires that appear across different cultures and epochs, and also offer contemporary meaning. Acknowledging the human need for environmental sound does not negate but rather evolves prevalent paradigms from their focus on ‹defense› against a selective welcome of it.

 

Nadine Schütz is a sound architect and researcher at the Chair of Prof. Christophe Girot, with whom she has established a new study focus on landscape acoustics, culminating in her recently accomplished Ph.D. project «Cultivating Sound – The Acoustic Dimension of Landscape Architecture». In the framework of this research she has also designed and coordinated the installation of the AudioVisual Lab for 3D acoustic landscape simulation (AV Lab). In parallel to her academic activity, Nadine Schütz works on urban, landscape and artistic projects (((Echora))).

This dissertation was completed in October 2017, supervised by Prof. Christophe Girot
Co-advisors: Prof. Kiyoshi Sey Takeyama, Prof. Germán Toro-Pérez
Project Funding: Swiss National Science Foundation (SNSF)

An extensive conversation with Christophe Girot and Nadine Schütz about the role of the acoustic dimension and the AV Lab in landscape teaching has been published in Tracés 02/2017.

Find out more

Nadine Schütz working in the AudioVisual Room at ETH Zurich. Capture from the documentary Refugia (2024) © One Planet One Future.

Developing a Unity-based Tool to Integrate Sound into Landscape Design and Evaluation
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This article has been published in the following newsletter edition:

36 | Dezember 2017: Geräuschkulissen

  • Beyond Noise and Silence: Auditory Qualities as Landscape Values
  • Umgebungsgeräusche für Visualisierungen von Landschaftstypen
  • The Noise Landscape – A Spatial Exploration of Airports and Cities
  • Fábrica de Cultura
  • «Welche Rolle spielt die Stadt in der heutigen Gesellschaft?»
Kurzmeldungen
  • Co-operatives: Putting People at the Centre of Development
  • Checnet – Kopplung von anthropogenen und ökologischen Netzwerken für eine nachhaltige Landschafts- und Verkehrsplanung
  • NSL Kolloquium Common Water: Der Film ist online
  • «Empower-Shack» auf der RIBA Longlist für das Weltbeste Gebäude
  • Coaching für zukunftsweisende Wohnbauprojekte
Publikationen
  • Spatial modelling of traffic volumes and mean speed values
  • Impacts of urban parking system on cruising traffic and policy development: The case of Zurich downtown area, Switzerland
  • A train rescheduling model integrating speed management for disruption management of high-speed traffic under a quasi-moving block system
  • Die Schweiz plant. Dokumente zur Geschichte der Raumplanung
  • Manual on Urban Design
  • Integration im Wohnbau
  • The Visible and the Intensive World Egypt, Landscapes and Territories
  • Manipulative Iconographies of Nile Dams: The Political Image
  • Between farming villages and hedge fund centres: The politics of urbanization in the border zone of the metropolitan region of Zurich.
  • Tout reste différent – vers un avenir partager. Un processus participatif fructueux à Zumikon (ZH)
  • Nature Modern: the place of landscape in the modern movement
Aktuell
  • 5th International Conference on Technologies for Development (Tech4Dev 2018): Voices of the Global South
  • Davos erfindet sich neu. Vom Lungenkurort zum Kongressstandort
  • Strassenverkehrstechnik: Neue Ergebnisse
  • Menschen und ihr Zuhause: Demografische Veränderungen, technologische Innovationen & neue Märkte
  • European-South East Asian Architectural Dialogue: Quintus Miller (Miller & Maranta Basel) im Gespräch mit Andra Matin (andramatin, Jakarta)
  • 1. Schweizer Landschaftskongress | 1er congrès suisse sur le paysage

Chairs

Prof. Dr. Bryan T. Adey
Prof. Dr. Kay W. Axhausen
Prof. Dr. Tom Avermaete
Prof. Maria Conen
Prof. Dr. Francesco Corman
Dr. Jennifer Duyne Barenstein
Prof. Teresa Galí-Izard
Prof. Dr. Adrienne Grêt-Regamey
Prof. Dr. Guillaume Habert
Prof. Dr. Eva Heinen
Prof. Damian Jerjen
Prof. Dr. David Kaufmann
Prof. Hubert Klumpner
Dr. Anastasios Kouvelas
Prof. Freek Persyn
Prof. Dr. Christian Schmid
Prof. Milica Topalovic
Prof. Martina Voser

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Deputy Director: Prof. Milica Topalovic

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