The Ecological Pulse of Electric Flows: Enriching Georgia’s Solar Landscape

Item

Title
The Ecological Pulse of Electric Flows: Enriching Georgia’s Solar Landscape
Description
This thesis explores the dissonance between the creation of solar landscapes and the disconnected conditions they produce. In the United States, tech corporations are the largest purchasers of renewable energy - they buy energy credits generated by remote solar sites in order to claim their data centers are ‘powered by 100% renewable energy.’ The companies morally and monetarily benefit from these claims while the solar sites’ conditions are anything but ecological.

The project proposes new logics, practices, and metrics that can be used to equitably transform post-agricultural landscapes into grounded photovoltaic solar sites. It rejects the current standard of surrounding the space with screenings and the sacrificial paradigm associated with infrastructural landscapes. Instead, this thesis imagines a reality where landscape architects design solar sites to be visible manifestations of corporate accountability, community connection, and ecological restoration. This new design standard ensures that both human and nonhuman stakeholders benefit from the space.
Creator
Soltis, Chloe
Subject
Solar Landscape
Design
Contributor
Desimini, Jill
Date
2021-05-25T04:07:01Z
2021
2021-05-24
2021-05
2021-05-25T04:07:01Z
Type
Thesis or Dissertation
text
Format
application/pdf
application/pdf
Identifier
Soltis, Chloe. 2021. The Ecological Pulse of Electric Flows: Enriching Georgia’s Solar Landscape. Master's thesis, Harvard Graduate School of Design.
28541581
https://nrs.harvard.edu/URN-3:HUL.INSTREPOS:37367709
Language
en