DANIELLE N. CHOI

Danielle N. Choi is a landscape architect, writer, and educator. Her research explores landscape design as a cultural practice that brings technology, infrastructure, and ecology into dialogue with public life. She currently teaches at the Harvard Graduate School of Design. Prior to her academic appointment, Choi practiced in landscape studios in New York City and Berlin.

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Origin Stories

2025-

Category: Research, Teaching 
From Jersey barriers to Cape Cod berms, Arizona crossings to the Rikers (Island) soil series, Chicago caissons to Portland cement, Stockholm tree pits to the Missouri gravel bed method – place names in material practices and techniques proliferate throughout the making of the built environment. However, how and why these techniques (and others that have lost their geographic nomenclature) emerged from specific cultural and climatic conditions – and how they circulate to new geographies through social and professional networks, rather than through marketing – is relatively underexamined. In tracing these operative practices – and deliberately bracketing off narrow economic explanations of market segmentation – I investigate alternative modes of landscape regionalism that have emerged between standardization and craft, between a globalized industry and the situated particularities of matter, ecology, and culture.

Image: Laguardia and other architectural fill soils, USDA-NCRS via Urban Soils Institute




Infrastructural Breaches of Continental Divides

2017 - ongoing

Category: Research
By the late 19th century, European colonization was extensive in its exploitation of the North American continent. The westward expansion of agriculture, ranching, and mining aligned territorial boundaries with significant geological features such as the Rocky Mountains, Great Lakes, and the Mississippi River. Water infrastructure of the early 20th century ruptured these geologic divides. This project investigates the meaning of landscape “regions” amidst these contradictions.

Point cloud drawing by Kira Clingen and Cecilia Huber.

Site Credit: August Sklar