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Research Interest:
Land use planning, local government finance, and
quantitative/research methods |
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Associate Professor
Dept of Landscape Architecture
Professor Lamba's expertise is the relationship between the
built and the natural forms in the creation of ecologically
sustainable environments. A member of the Temple University
faculty since 1989, he teaches courses in public park design,
campus planning, urban design, landscape engineering, and basic
AutoCAD.
Professor Lamba's interests include interdisciplinary teaching,
community design and urban revitalization. In addition to
teaching, his diverse professional experience has included
working in India, the Middle East, and the United States.
Professor Lamba has won national and international design
competitions, including a first place award for his design of a
water garden at the National Botanical Garden in Washington,
D.C. He is also the author of several articles in professional
and trade publications, such as Garden Design and Your Home.
His community-based service projects have included working with
Temple University Ambler students and the students of Barratt
Middle School in South Philadelphia to create a roof garden, a
revitalization project with Temple's Landscape Architecture
students for Vernon Park in Germantown, Project El Parque in
West Kensington, and El Mercado in Kensington.
As a principal investigator, Professor Lamba is involved in the
development of a multidisciplinary urban design studio at Temple
that would initiate a community-based planning process to
research, analyze, and propose solutions to complex urban
revitalization issues facing post-industrial, inner-city
neighborhoods.
Professor Lamba is an associated faculty member of the Center
for Sustainable Communities at Temple University Ambler. He is
principal of Lamba Associates, Landscape Architects, and a
registered landscape architect in Pennsylvania, New Jersey, and
Delaware, a member of the American Society of Landscape
Architects, and a member of the Council of Educators in
Landscape Architecture. He is also chairman of the Shade Tree
Commission in Doylestown, Bucks County. |