Tag Archives: By F. Bernstein

Pardon His Progress

Daniel Biederman sweats all the details in a crusade to make parks that work.

By Fred A. Bernstein 

Daniel Biederman’s desire to improve America’s parks has him patrolling green spaces from Santa Monica to Boston, issuing complaints about everything from a messy bicycle rack weld (“it looks like Play-Doh”) to the quantity of caution tape around an out-of-order bathroom (“people will think it’s a crime scene”). Continue reading Pardon His Progress

A Hand Up, a Hand Down

Set-asides for women-owned firms are a paradox. Some can move you ahead. Others are just a headache.

By Fred A. Bernstein

Andrea Cochran, FASLA, the San Francisco-based landscape architect, has received the Cooper Hewitt’s National Design Award, the ASLA Design Medal, and many other honors. But despite her prominence, she says, she still sees sexism affecting the profession. “It’s not overt, but it’s there,” says Cochran, explaining that it is precisely her success that makes her aware of the problem. “If you asked me when I was in my 20s if I had ever experienced sexism, I would have laughed at you,” she says. “But then you get to a certain point in your career and you realize there is a glass ceiling.” In her experience, “It’s still hard to get certain types of jobs, some of the bigger jobs, if you’re a woman.” Continue reading A Hand Up, a Hand Down