LVF Labs

Established in 2021, LVF Labs addresses complex environmental challenges through design research, integrating academic study with practical application in built projects.

Focused on natural and nature-based infrastructure solutions, our research develops implementable approaches that range from plant adaptation management methods for coastal change to novel digital design tools that enable rapid iteration with hydraulic modeling.


Who We Are

LVF Labs is a team of professional researchers and licensed practitioners who excel at identifying knowledge gaps, formulating targeted questions and developing practical solutions.

Our partnership with the Natural Infrastructure Lab at the University of Virginia allows us to test design ideas in real time and at scale, providing results that can be seamlessly implemented into our design work.


Areas of research focus

Environmental Dynamics Analysis

To design with a changing system, LVF Labs collaborates with an array of specialist to develop iterative analysis and design methods that enable fluid design development. We specialize in working in wet conditions, in tight coordination with Hydraulics and Hydrology experts.

Adaptive Management

When Nature-Based Infrastructure is at its best, it should change in form and space to guide the evolution of environmental systems. To enable these transformations and address new conditions, strategic adaptive management is a vital part of the design process. LVF Labs works with governmental agencies to study an array of properties exhibited by plants and substrate that can be manipulated to enhance currently known best practices.

Monitoring

For state and federal agencies to fully buy in to Nature Based Infrastructure implementation, there must be effective ways to monitor the evolution of these environmental systems. LVF Labs work with a host of specialists ranging from remote sensing to spectroscopy to plant sciences to develop novel methods of tracking and mapping. This mapping includes discrete plant species, sediment as well as water and wet landscapes.