Design Research for Natural Infrastructure

LIDL is the Landscape Infrastructure Design Lab at Auburn University. We conduct design research using landscape architectural methods to advance the design, planning and management of natural infrastructure.

Currently, we are working on a broad range of coastal infrastructure projects from the Great Lakes south to the Gulf of Mexico, sponsored by funders including the US Army Corps of Engineers’ Engineering With Nature program, the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration’s Effects of Sea Level Rise program and the Gulf Research Program of the National Academies of Sciences, Engineering and Medicine.

The Natural Infrastructure Innovation Project, awarded in 2023, is sponsored by Engineering With Nature, and is being conducted in partnership with the Natural Infrastructure Lab at the University of Virginia (lead investigator Brian Davis) and the EMLab at the University of Pennsylvania (lead investigator Sean Burkholder).

Through the lab director, Rob Holmes, we are affiliated with the Dredge Research Collaborative, a network of collaborators across the United States that aims to improve the design of sediment systems through writing, public events, and design research. Working with the DRC, Rob co-authored the book Silt Sand Slurry, participated in the Resilient by Design Bay Area Challenge as a member of the Public Sediment team, and helped organize the DredgeFest event series. The DRC’s work has received a number of awards, including a 2019 ASLA Honor Award in Research for Public Sediment for Alameda Creek and 2016 ASLA Honor Award in Communications for the DredgeFest event series.