SOLD OUT! ULI Virginia: Members Only: Exploring the Low Line

When

2019-10-23
2019-10-23T16:00:00 - 2019-10-23T18:00:00
America/New_York

Choose Your Calendar

    Where

    Great Shiplock Park Will open in a new window Pear and Dock Streets 2803 Dock Street Richmond, VA 23223 UNITED STATES
    Join our members only walking tour of the Low Line and learn about the origins of the Low Line development and the overall goal of the project. Topics to be discussed include the design and engineering elements, challenges, costs, the connections to the surrounding neighborhood and the Capital Trail.  

    Pricing

    Standard Pricing Until October 22 Members Non-Members
    Private FREE N/A
    Public/Academic/Nonprofit FREE N/A
    Retired FREE N/A
    Student FREE N/A
    Under Age 35 FREE N/A
    Pricing
    Private FREE N/A
    Public/Academic/Nonprofit FREE N/A
    Retired FREE N/A
    Student FREE N/A
    Under Age 35 FREE N/A
     SOLD OUT!
     
    Wednesday, October 23, 2019
    4:00 - 5:00 pm - Walking Tour
    5:00 - 6:00 pm - Conversation and Cocktails at Nota Bene
     
    Meet at Great Shiplock Park; Pear & Dock Street 
     
    In 2015, Capital Trees embarked on its most ambitious project to date — a collaboration between the City of Richmond, CSX Corporation and Capital Trees to rehabilitate 5.5 acres along the James River and Kanawha Canal. The site, which is in the City of Richmond’s East End and runs beneath raised railroad trestles owned by the CSX Corporation, was dubbed the “Low Line” in a nod to its inspiration, New York City’s “High Line.” Whereas New York City’s High Line park is built upon decommissioned railroad trestles, Richmond’s Low Line runs beneath active trestles.
      
    Join our members only walking tour of the Low Line and learn about the origins of the Low Line development and the overall goal of the project. Topics to be discussed include the design and engineering elements, challenges, costs, the connections to the surrounding neighborhood and the Capital Trail.  
     
    After, we will continue our discussion at Nota Bene for cocktails and appetizers.
     
    Free to members.
    Limited to 15 

    Great Shiplock Park Pear and Dock Streets Richmond, VA 23223 UNITED STATES

    view map Will open in a new window

    Speakers

    Meg Turner

    M. Turner Landscapes

    Surrounded by some of the most beautiful and historic gardens in the country while practicing law in New Orleans and Charleston, Meg’s passion for classical garden design was born. Strolling under the Live Oaks in New Orleans’s Audubon Park, she was entranced by the lush plantings framing the elegant terraces of the magnificent houses bordering the park. In Charleston, she walked to work down historic Meeting Street on sidewalks of weathered bluestone, past aged brick walls draped in Wisteria. Meg and her husband Banks later moved to Richmond, Virginia, bought their first home and planted their first garden together. Although she cringes when she thinks of the monotonous layout of her first planting beds, she will never forget the exhilaration of tending that first garden — burrowing below the mulch on the first warm February day to see how close the Solomon’s Seal was to breaking ground, ripping out English Ivy for hours at a time, nurturing the Boxwood lovingly rooted by her father-in law. Although she still loved the law, Meg threw herself into landscape design. Mentored by the brilliant landscape architect Anna Galusha Aquino, she acquired an appreciation for the classical principles of design, the necessity of proper scale, proportion and balance and the paramount importance of quality materials and workmanship and attention to detail. Meg recently developed her own line of garden ornament and furniture. The planters, chairs, tables and tuteurs she designs are custom-made by classically trained artisans who labor over every detail to produce enduring pieces for well-loved gardens. Meg writes about design, horticulture, significant private and public gardens, and developments in urban greening initiatives at her blog, The Well Dressed Garden. Meg graduated from the University of Virginia and the University of Virginia School of Law. She received her certificate in landscape design at George Washington University. Meg lives and gardens in Richmond, Virginia.

    Frazier Armstrong

    Executive Director, Capital Trees

    Executive Director for Capital Trees. Frazier leads the organization’s strategic capacity building, focused growth, donor engagement, day-to-day operations, and pursuing and maintaining relationships with organizations that complement Capital Trees’ mission. Frazier also spearheads the development of the next phase of the Low Line, an urban park located along the Capital Trail and the Kanawha and James River Canal that connects the Riverfront Canal Walk and Great Shiplock Park. The Low Line is 5.5-acre green oasis along the historic waterfront utilizing native plants and green infrastructure to mitigate storm water runoff. Frazier Millner Armstrong is a strategist who connects mission, marketing and investment. She has been recognized for creating and leading clear strategic and innovative solutions, and has more than 25 years of broad-based communications, fundraising and marketing experience. Since 2013, as a consultant, Frazier has specialized in organizational capacity building, development campaigns and analysis and marketing and strategic communications.

    Keith Whipple

    Principal, WaterStreet

    Master of Business Administration, Mason School of Business at College of William & Mary, 2013 Master of Urban & Regional Planning, Virginia Commonwealth University, 2005 Bachelor of Science in Horticulture, University of Georgia, 2002