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Eleanor + Donald Landscape Architects

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Hiring: Graduate Landscape Architect

Job Title: Graduate Landscape Architect

Location: Canterbury (studio-based)
Job Type: Full-time
Salary: Competitive

Design with purpose. Shape landscapes that connect people to nature.

At EDLA, we design places that bring people closer to the natural world. We’re an award-winning landscape architecture studio based in Canterbury, known for thoughtful, people-first design across the south-east. Our work ranges from Millwall FC’s training ground to rooftop gardens in London, new parks, play spaces, and a surfing lagoon at Betteshanger Park.

You might be a fit if you:

• Have a degree in landscape architecture, architecture, or geography
• Draw confidently by hand and in CAD
• Enjoy working on creative landscape design and concept drawings
• Are interested in planning policy and how places are shaped
• Can write clearly and enjoy problem-solving through design
• Are curious, collaborative, and ready to grow

What it’s like to work with us

We’re a small, collaborative team who care deeply about design quality, nature, and people. We support flexible working, shared learning, and a healthy work-life balance. Everyone contributes across the studio, whether developing ideas, reviewing work, or supporting projects at all stages. We value openness, initiative, and a willingness to learn together.

We actively support each person’s growth within the business. Every team member has access to an individual training budget, and we cover the cost of professional memberships and chartership fees, including Landscape Institute membership.

What we offer:

• Competitive salary
• 28 days holiday plus your birthday off
• Additional day’s holiday per year after two years’ service (up to five extra days)
• £1,500 annual training budget
• Landscape Institute membership and chartership fees covered
• Private dental care
• Two Charity Days per year

To apply:
Send a CV and portfolio (under 10MB, max 20 pages) to office@edla.co.uk
Applications close: 25 August 2025

From Rules to Resilience: The Case for Landscape-Led, Community-Centric Design Codes

Attending the recent NLA Design Code event prompted me to reflect deeply on the evolving role of design codes in shaping our built environment. The discussions reinforced how design codes have evolved to become multifaceted tools, serving varied roles in guiding both urban and rural developments. Increasingly, codes are becoming thematic, focusing in-depth on specific issues such as heritage conservation, streetscape quality, green infrastructure integration, and accommodating public transport and active movement. Integrating these thematic codes with considerations of climate resilience and sustainable design principles presents a powerful opportunity for driving the significant changes required to meet today’s ecological and climate emergencies. With a forthcoming update to the National Model Design Code and the National Design Guide expected soon, there is potential for clearer guidance and stronger frameworks to further embed these critical priorities. 

 Balancing Specificity and Flexibility 

One prominent theme that emerged was the necessity of balancing clarity and specificity in codes with sufficient flexibility to stimulate creativity and innovation. While overly prescriptive codes risk constraining designers and stifling site-specific solutions, codes that establish clear design principles yet remain methodologically adaptable create conditions for sustainable and imaginative outcomes. We need to embrace what some participants described as ‘bagginess’, an organic flexibility consciously built into the codes, to anticipate changes in technology, practice, and sustainability standards over time. Design codes must begin with robust overarching principles, yet remain open and receptive to innovative methods of realising these aspirations as new opportunities emerge. 

Rather than viewing design codes as static and restrictive, our guiding principle should position them as dynamic, adaptable frameworks that actively facilitate necessary change. Clearly articulating a guiding vision, design priorities, landscape strategies, and movement considerations, as well as identifying unique character areas reflective of local contexts, sets a strong foundation. With built-in mechanisms for regular review and updating, design codes can allow flexibility to evolve, ensuring that our urban environments remain resilient, relevant, and responsive to future challenges. 

 The Undeniable Value of Landscape-Led Design 

Consistent across inputs from various speakers and case studies was the principle of genuinely landscape-led design coding. While the term “landscape-led” can sometimes seem overused without sufficient clarity or follow-through, strong examples discussed at the session showed how professional, early, and sustained involvement of landscape architects can profoundly shape the framework. Genuine landscape-led approaches deliver tangible environmental, social, economic and wellbeing benefits, influencing how we plan, build, and live within urban developments. 

Community engagement continues to underline a persistent public demand for accessible, high-quality green open spaces. These spaces consistently form critical pillars of successful masterplans, underpinning local support for new development. Importantly, well designed landscapes improve communities significantly: enhancing physical and mental health, encouraging active and social lifestyles, reducing stress, improving air quality, and fostering deeper, more meaningful connections to nature. 

 The Role of Community, Simplicity, and Accessibility 

A further critical element discussed extensively was the necessity of closely involving local communities and strengthening the influence of community and expert peer-review panels from early concept stages onward. Codes need to be accessible, intuitive tools, not barriers to understanding. Simple, clear language combined with effective graphic representation not only demystifies the content but empowers local communities, ensuring outcomes are widely understood and accepted. Robust community dialogue helps ensure codes remain responsive to evolving local needs, deepening community engagement and stewardship over time. 

 Integrating Landscape into Urban Design: Lessons from Earls Court and Staples Corner 

The session’s insights from two key London design code projects vividly illustrated the potential and impact of landscape-led coding. 

The Earls Court Design Code and Masterplan, for instance, is recognised as one of London’s largest and most influential urban development opportunities. This plan underscores powerful community involvement techniques, shaped through extensive workshops with local stakeholders, borough representatives, heritage specialists, and architects and landscape architects. Crucially, strong landscape principles and explicit commitments to green infrastructure have become guiding threads in the masterplan, helping realise an urban vision that emphasises connectivity, ecological recovery, biodiversity, and culturally enriching public spaces. Green spaces, planned thoughtfully, offer vital community gathering areas, active travel routes, facilities promoting play and recreation suitable for all age groups, alongside spaces for urban agriculture and cultural expression, each serving to enhance social connections and intergenerational interactions. 

Similarly, the Staples Corner Design Code developed by the London Borough of Brent showcases how landscape-led approaches can tackle challenges within complex ‘grey belt’ environments dominated by industrial heritage and significant transport infrastructure. Here, fragmented ownership and disconnected public realm spaces posed considerable challenges. Through robust community engagement methods involving local champions, a detailed three part draft code emerged, defining clear streetscape, character identity, and area-wide guidelines to improve clarity and enforceability. 

 Design Codes as Catalysts for Lasting Change? 

Ultimately, the purpose of design codes must move beyond traditional concerns with design guidance toward a proactive, holistic approach capable of addressing critical contemporary issues such as climate change, ecological degradation, and social inequality. High quality outdoor spaces, green infrastructure, accessible routes, and healthy environments must be championed and viewed as fundamental public goods; essential tools for mitigating health inequalities, building social capital, and ensuring urban resilience. 

Using design codes as dynamic, enabling frameworks – instead of burdensome or restrictive policy documents can help planners, designers, authorities, and communities collaboratively realise visions of connected, flexible, resilient, and equitable environments. 

The link to the presentations can be found here 

We'd be interested to hear about your projects and ideas, do get in touch.
office@edla.co.uk
01227 490485