Evocative concepts will take physical shape on West Virginia Universitys Evansdale Campus in the courtyard of the Agriculture Science Building as second-year students in WVU s landscape architecture program create the third annualExhibit of Spatial Vision and ExpressionNov. 9-16.

The designers are enrolled in LARC 250 Theory of Landscape Architecture and Design, taught by Michael Hasenmyer, an assistant professor in WVU s Davis College of Agriculture, Forestry and Consumer Sciences.

Hasenmyer says the project is an ideal way of letting student not only design an exhibit on paper but to actualize its creation.

The exhibition consists of eight different spaces designed to createa design of a space that reflects a specific, evocative adjective, with such words as �€~mysterious,�€~fluidand �€~dynamic,Hasenmyer said.The students are encouraged to create designs that evoke their specific word without resorting to common iconography.

Students work in groups of four and five students and started installing their designs last week.

Groups will present their designs to classmates at 6 p.m. Wednesday, Nov. 9, at the main entry courtyard of the Agricultural Sciences Building on WVU s Evansdale Campus. The installation will remain in place until Wednesday, Nov. 16.