Influential landscape architect, educator, researcher and author Richard Weller passed away on May 15, 2025 in Perth, Australia after nearly four decades in professional practice and academia, leaving behind a rich legacy that will continue to inspire future generations of landscape designers.
Deeply passionate about landscape architecture and teaching, the Australian-born Weller was Professor Emeritus of Landscape Architecture and former Chair of the Department of Landscape Architecture at the Weitzman School of Design, University of Pennsylvania, USA where he, together with Dean and Paley Professor Fritz Steiner, co-founded the Ian L. McHarg Center for Urbanism and Ecology.
He was also co-founder and former creative director of the interdisciplinary journal of landscape architecture, LA+, as well as director of Australian design firm Room 4.1.3, which he co-founded with Vladimir Sitta and designed the iconic (and controversial) Garden of Australia Dreams at the National Museum of Australia, Canberra. The Perth foreshore masterplan and the landscape design for Melbourne’s Docklands are some of his other well-known projects.
He was a member of the Landscape Architecture Foundation (LAF) board in Washington DC, USA from 2014 to 2018, serving as an active Board Emeritus thereafter, and was the inaugural recipient of LAF’s Legacy Award in 2023, given in honour of his contributions to the organisation.
As Winthrop Professor of Landscape Architecture at the University of Western Australia, Weller collaborated with Craig Burton to develop the University’s Landscape Architecture course, and was director of the University’s Australian Urban Design Research Centre.
In their tribute, the Weitzman School of Design described Weller as “a vocal critic of what he saw as humanity’s hubris in redesigning Planet Earth”, who “drew on history, philosophy, and the arts to challenge the status quo in the built environment professions, and enlisted help from students and colleagues to develop a series of ambitious design proposals to protect biodiversity”.
Throughout his career, Weller received several accolades for his work as a visionary landscape architect as well as an accomplished teacher, with his designs not only winning global design competitions but also exhibited internationally at the Guggenheim Museum in New York, the Venice and Rotterdam Biennales, the Museum of Contemporary Art in Sydney, the Isabella Stewart Gardner Museum in Boston, the MAXXI Gallery in Rome, the Canadian Design Museum in Toronto, and the Central Academy of Fine Arts in Beijing.
In 2012, he was honoured with an Australian national teaching award for his commitment to design education, and was named by Design Intelligence as one of the top 25 most respected design educators in the USA in 2017 and 2018. He was also inducted into the Academy of Fellows of the Council of Educators in Landscape Architecture (CELA) in 2020 in recognition of his distinguished career.
In 2024, the Australian Institute of Landscape Architects (AILA) honoured Weller with the President’s Award for a lifetime of achievement in landscape architecture.
“Richard Weller’s legacy is one of fearless creativity, intellectual generosity, and unwavering dedication to the advancement of landscape architecture. He leaves behind a body of work, a generation of inspired practitioners, and a profession forever enriched by his presence,” AILA says in their tribute.
A prolific writer, Weller authored/curated nine books and over 150 academic papers, book chapters and articles on the theory and practice of landscape architecture and urban design,[5] including Room 4.1.3: Innovations in Landscape Architecture (University of Pennsylvania Press, 2005), Made in Australia: The Future of Australian Cities (UWAP, 2013), The Landscape Project (AR+D Publishing, 2022), An Art of Instrumentality (ORO Editions, 2023), and To The Ends of the Earth: A Grand Tour for the 21st Century (Birkhauser, 2024) among others. His recent research initiatives focussed on the growing conflict between biodiversity hotspots and urban growth across the world.
With his award-winning works and accomplishments in academia, Weller leaves behind a legacy that will continue to shape the future of landscape architecture and its practitioners.
Image source: https://richardweller.net/