General admission for children 17 years and under is always free

Landscape Lecture

Mary Margaret Jones

Thursday, May 10, 2018
7 pm
Calderwood Hall

Join us for our annual series of engaging and inspirational presentations from leading voices in the field of landscape architecture. Internationally renowned designers present their recent work articulating landscape as a medium of design for the social, cultural, and ecological life of the city.

Mary Margaret Jones is president of Hargreaves Associates and Hargreaves Jones, overseeing offices in San Francisco, Cambridge, and New York. Jones is known for her leadership of many of the firm’s award-winning projects around the globe. She also serves on numerous juries, lectures widely, and is active in the public forum of design and development issues. Jones is the Prince Charitable Trust Fellow in Landscape Architecture of the American Academy in Rome and current Chairman of the Board of Trustees. She is a Fellow of the American Society of Landscape Architects and Sr. Fellow of the Design Futures Council.

HOW TO BUY TICKETS

Tickets are required and include Museum admission.

Adults $15, seniors $12, students $5, free for members and children 17 and under.

  • Online, by clicking the TICKETS button above*
  • By calling the box office at 617 278 5156, Wednesday-Monday, 10 am-4 pm*
  • In person: Visit the Museum and purchase at the door, Wednesday-Monday, 11 am-4:30 pm

*Handling charges apply to these orders

In the event that tickets sell-out, the Museum will offer a limited number of obstructed view seats on the night of this lecture. You can sign-up for these seats at the Admissions Desk after 6pm. We will make every attempt to seat everyone, but cannot guarantee a seat when we have reached capacity. Note the Museum's event policies.

Image: Discovery Green, Houston, photo courtesy Hargreaves Associates.

Landscape and Horticulture public programs are supported by the Barbara E. Millen and Markley H. Boyer Endowment Fund. These programs also are supported in part by the Massachusetts Cultural Council, which receives support from the State of Massachusetts and the National Endowment for the Arts.