FOREGROUND
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EMPOWERED BY LANDSCAPE URBAN AGRICULTURE, PLANT IDENTIFICATION, AND LANDSCAPE DESIGN ARE AMONG THE SUBJECTS AT A LANDSCAPE TRAINING CENTER IN UGANDA. BY LISA OWENS VIANI
TOP
Students at the training center are taught to measure and draw baseline conditions.
olomon Luyimbazi always knew he wanted to be a landscape designer. “Right from childhood I had passion for nature, beautification, and transformation of the environment,” he says. But when Luyimbazi graduated from secondary school in 2012, he discovered that his coursework didn’t meet university-level landscape architecture program requirements. He worried about finding a job in Uganda, where unemployment is a big problem for young people, even college grads.
RIGHT
Cameron Berglund, ASLA, (left) and Maria Kaweesa (far right) with officials from Uganda’s Directorate of Industrial Training.
Luyimbazi found out about a vocational training institute for landscaping and gardening run by a Ugandan nonprofit, the Community Integrated Development
52 / LANDSCAPE ARCHITECTURE MAGAZINE NOV 2019
CAMERON BERGLUND, ASLA, TOP; ADELINA GARAMOW, BOTTOM
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