Landscape
The term landscape arises as a starting point since it allows, in some way, the establishment of a link between both disciplines. Although it is a concept that varies and adapts to diverse contexts, social, natural, geographical, or anthropological, it implies a certain convergence insofar as it involves specific actions in both disciplines and their respective methodologies.
Considering the different approaches and the polysemic perspective associated with the term, this research focuses on the notion of landscape as country, that is, as a representation or image of a portion of the world, understood as a certain extension of terrain that acquires unity and independence by virtue of the attention somebody gives to it. Thus, from the notion of landscape as a filtered fragment, piece, or cutout, a transdisciplinary intersection is proposed, where the human–environment relationship is identified both in design and in geography, through three tendencies that operate in the act of making landscape:
