From the Sugar
house and Barn to a thirty-four acre wooded campus: A school
thirty-three years in the making

Walter Cudnohufsky wasn’t satisfied with the status quo. He had received a
Master’s degree in landscape architecture from Harvard in 1965, spent
eighteen months traveling, and was teaching design at a large university.
He was frustrated with traditional design education, which he considered
too compartmentalized, inflexible, and theoretical
He had explored design education in his graduate thesis and had been
reading progressive education theory. He wanted to try a new way of doing
things, with hands-on learning, more like a working design office. He
thought it should be student-based, not institutionally organized, and he
wanted it to be a shared experience that emphasized teamwork. He wanted to
start a new school that would turn design education on its head. And he
did.
A PERSONAL LOAN LAUNCHES THE SCHOOL
Although he hadn’t envisioned a design school in a rural setting, for
reasons of economy, Walt began the school in his Conway home and
peripheral buildings—a sugar-house and a converted barn. He secured an
$8,000 personal loan to pay for renovations and float the school in its
first year. Construction took place over the summer of 1972, in
anticipation of the first class—seven men and two women, mostly from
Massachusetts.
Classes were held every day, at times with studio also every day. There
might be an impromptu stone wall building demonstration or other
invitations to “learn by doing.” Chores were always part of the sharing,
potlucks and games part of the fun. Communications always was and still is
an important focus of the school.
Walt’s belief was that if you can’t explain your ideas in writing and
speaking, then you’re not in charge of yourself or what you’re doing.
SECOND DIRECTOR ARRIVES AS STUDENT
Don Walker, who would prove to be a major force in the evolution of the
school, came as a student in 1978. He already had two degrees in landscape
architecture and much experience in teaching and practice. He, too, was
disillusioned with his teaching experience and the persistent pressure to
do research. With Don’s addition to the staff came a gradual shift in
focus from teaching traditional landscape architecture to encouraging
design that is environmentally sound. Increasingly applicants were seeking
this new way of looking at design.
ACCREDITATION ACHIEVED
The New England Association of Schools and Colleges granted full
accreditation effective 1989. In 1992, Walt left the school to put into
practice the things that he had been teaching. He began what continues to
be a thriving private practice, one that has many ecological and community
building dimensions. Today he regards the Conway School of Landscape Design
as his greatest lifetime contribution, while giving credit to the people
who are carrying the school forward.
Don Walker became Director in 1992, a position he held until his
retirement in 2005. Don and staff oversaw the move from the school’s
thirty-year home to a nearby wooded hilltop. The 34.5-acre campus is being
planned as a learning laboratory for sustainable design.
Conway’s third director, landscape architect and conservation planner Paul
Cawood Hellmund, is committed to the school’s unique teaching approach and
to sustainable design. He also has a strong interest in expanding the
school’s perspective to global environmental opportunities.
In the school’s lively history, some things, such as its outward
appearance and personnel, have changed. Other things, especially its focus
on individualized learning, will always remain as constants.
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