faculty
Hope Hasbrouck
Graduate Advisor, Landscape Architecture
Assistant Professor
GOL 2.308 | office
+1 512 475 7994 | phone
+1 512 471 0716 | fax
The University of Texas at Austin
School of Architecture
1 University Station B7500
Austin, TX 78712
Hope H. Hasbrouck teaches graduate level design studios and lecture courses in Landscape Architecture. Her teaching spans from the core curriculum to advanced seminars and design studios. In May of 2005 Ms. Hasbrouck received the School of Architecture Outstanding Teacher Award (studio) and the School of Architecture Outstanding Service Award.
Ms. Hasbrouck's professional and academic background lends itself to an interdisciplinary approach to the study of landscape architecture. Her interests range from the examination of landscape as infrastructure to the integration of computation and information technology in landscape architectural education and practice. Collaboratively in 2001 she published Landscape Modeling: Digital Techniques for Landscape Visualization, which received a merit award from the American Society of Landscape Architects.
Prior to joining the faculty at the University of Texas, Ms. Hasbrouck was a member of the Faculty of Design at Harvard University. Her professional experience includes an association with Hargreaves Associates where she worked on the redevelopment of Boston City Hall Plaza and University Commons at the University of Cincinnati. She was affiliated with James Stewart Polshek and Partners in New York from 1991 - 1993, contributing to such projects as the Museum of the City of New York, and the master plan for the Brooklyn Museum. In 2002-2004 she consulted for the interdisciplinary firm of Crosby, Schlessinger, Smallridge in Boston, Massachusetts on the visualization of the North End Parks, Rose Kennedy Greenway, Boston, MA.
Ms. Hasbrouck received a Bachelor of Arts with a major in architecture from Washington University in Saint Louis, a Master of Architecture from the University of Virginia, and her Masters of Landscape Architecture from the Graduate School of Design of Harvard University.