Abstract

Professional landscape architecture organizations have requested training from educational institutions based on new skills and methodologies in the curriculum development of students. Landscape architects need to visualize and evaluate the spatial relationships between the different components of the landscape using two-dimensional (2D) or three-dimensional (3D) maps and geospatial information, for which spatial orientation skills are necessary. The data from six workshops conducted throughout the 2010–2020 period, in which 560 second-year engineering students participated using different strategies and technical tools for spatial orientation skills’ development, were collected in a unique study. Factors such as the technology used, the gaming environment, the type of task, the 2D/3D environment, and the virtual environment were considered. The Perspective-Taking Spatial Orientation Test was the measurement tool used. The results show that mapping tasks are more efficient than route-based tasks. Strategies using 2D and a 2D/3D combination are more effective than those with only 3D. First-person perspective gaming environments are also a valid alternative. The technologies applied in this study are easy to use and free, and a measurement tool is provided. This facilitates an interdisciplinary approach between landscape architecture education and professional practice since these workshops could also be easily carried out by professional bodies for landscape planning and management.

Highlights

  • Landscape architecture is a professional field that focuses on the spatial configuration of landscapes and landforms on different scales

  • In order to determine the differences in gains according to the different methods of classification used for the workshops, an ANOVA was performed for each classification

  • Many studies emphasize the importance of spatial orientation skills in landscape architecture, both in the academic and professional fields, as well as strategies for relevant training

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Summary

Introduction

Landscape architecture is a professional field that focuses on the spatial configuration of landscapes and landforms on different scales. Landscape architects need to visualize and evaluate the spatial relationships between the different components of the landscape [1,2]. Chaloupska, Hrusova and Chaloupsky [5] stated that “Landscape interpretation requires understanding the relations between the map, the represented space, and oneself, which is not an easy task”. For these tasks, it is necessary to use spatial thinking [6].

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