The Lambda Alpha International (LAI) Society, an international honorary society for the advancement of land economics, recently inducted landscape architect Bob Kost from SEH.


SEH and it’s partners EE&K Architects, a Perkins Eastman Company, Chris Baker and Steve Dietz were selected to receive a 2012 Merit Award from the American Society of Landscape Architects Minnesota Chapter (ASLA-MN) for their innovative public plaza redesign of the Mississippi River Bridge Plaza on the University of Minnesota (U of M) campus.


Envision ™ is a new rating system designed to promote sustainable infrastructure in the United States. SEH staff have been involved in helping shape this new tool over the past couple years. This is part two in a series providing background on the tool and its intended use. 


SEH planners and urban designers assisted the Town of Burns Harbor prepare a new, form-based zoning code to guide the implementation of smart growth policies developed in the Town's updated Comprehensive Plan. The code creates a new set of mixed use districts one of which establishes parameters for the creation of new town center.


The Old Yellowstone District Form-based zoning code serves as one of the primary tools for guiding the implementation of the district's vibrant, walkable, mixed use redevelopment vision.


Fundraising for Edina's Veterans Memorial will begin in earnest now that the City Council has approved the memorial's design and concept.


SEH of Indiana Welcomes Award-Winning Landscape Architect.


Located on the east end of the Washington Avenue Bridge in Minneapolis, Minn., a pedestrian plaza is the focus of a design competition that will completely change how pedestrians and cyclists experience the space.


SEH landscape architects assisted the City in transforming a neighborhood gathering space by replacing a derelict fountain and aging hardscape with new gateway pergola, walkways, softscape and interactive splash pad feature. The project recycles splash pad water for lawn irrigation and filters rainwater in a series of vegetated bioswales.


SEH landscape architects and engineers employed an integrated approach to repurposing a 4-lane divided arterial roadway system into a multimodal facility that also treats stormwater where is falls. The project included new sidewalks, trails, transit facilities and the conversion of center medians into decorative, linear bio-swales.


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