Jens Jensen The Living Green

Jens Jensen The Living Green

Release Date

2013

Director

  • Carey Lundin

Unsung pioneer landscape architect Jens Jensen became one of the nation’s most influential urban designers and early conservationists, shaping the Midwest’s physical and cultural landscape and championing the need for nature in our cities.

Danish born Jens Jensen rose from immigrant street sweeper in the 1880’s to “dean of American landscape architects,” as the New York Times called him upon his death in 1951.

When Jensen arrived in Chicago in 1885, it was one of the fastest growing cities in human history, and one of the least livable, especially for the working poor. Inspired by the Midwest prairie and plains, Jensen believed that urban dwellers needed the beauty of nature in their lives and “the living green" to survive, and he found creative ways to bring it to them.

Jens Jensen The Living Green is illustrated with archival footage, photos and interviews, including with Jensen himself, that trace his remarkable rise, career, and lasting influence as a man ahead of his time. Half a century after his death, Jensen is now hailed as a pioneer of sustainable design, an early champion of native species, and an unsung American hero. (Excerpted from the Video Project)



Past Programs

2018

"The living green" in urban environments

Gorton Community Center, Lake Forest, IL