UNIVERSITY PARK, Pa. — In December 2018, Penn State President Eric Barron announced that the University has partnered with ClearWater Conservancy to explore environmentally responsible land use options for the roughly 355 acres it owns between Whitehall Road and Rothrock State Forest at Musser Gap. The area has been dubbed the Musser Gap to Valleylands, or MG2V, site.
“Our vision for this area is to not only help protect the local water supply, plant and animal species, but also make it a place where people can enjoy nature, learn about the environment and be inspired,” said Barron.
Barron also was eager to engage students in this project as a real-world learning opportunity. At the request of the Office of the President, the Department of Landscape Architecture took the reins of the design project and Eliza Pennypacker, professor and head of the department, jumped at the opportunity to lead this important effort.
“We’re delighted to assist the University with this forward-thinking project that falls squarely within our department’s mission to do environmental and social good,” said Pennypacker. “Through the MG2V project, our faculty and students have the unique opportunity to work with the University and local citizens to have a positive impact on our land and on our community.”
ClearWater Conservancy was a natural fit for the project as they partnered with Penn State on the Musser Gap Greenway Trail, an important link within the MG2V site, to connect downtown State College via Whitehall Road to the Rothrock State Forest at Musser Gap.
A two-phased process emerged as the logical approach to this project and was developed by Pennypacker, Associate Professor Emeritus Tom Yahner, Associate Professor Andy Cole and Distinguished Professor Ken Tamminga. First, a fall course would challenge faculty and students to take a deep dive into understanding the site. Next, a course in the spring would engage stakeholders so the class and faculty could learn about their personal values and concerns regarding the site. The entirety of the background would be used by students to develop possible future scenarios for the site within the second half of the spring course.
At the heart of the MG2V project is the department’s Ecology + Design (E+D) research initiative, which stresses the importance of environmental scientists and designers partnering from the onset of the design process to balance the environmental priorities with the social opportunities of a project.
“E+D is intended to bring ecology and design together at the very beginning of any project,” said Cole, who is the director of the emerging E+D center. “It is important for the MG2V class to reflect that same philosophy, as the MG2V site is ecologically sensitive and we want to make sure that ecological principles are included in whatever design options might arise by the end of this spring semester. As such, the MG2V classes are definitely supported and sponsored by E+D. It's right where we want to be."
In fall 2018, Tamminga led an interdisciplinary course of graduate and undergraduate students to evaluate the land and its biophysical, geological, ecological, agricultural and historic characteristics. Although it was a landscape architecture class, half of the students (and numerous guest experts) came from other disciplines, particularly in the earth and life sciences fields, which Tamminga says was key to the initial investigation of the land.