In terms of nuclear landscapes and landscaping, there's some interesting online archive material via CANMORE of the sketches Basil Spence made when he was designing the exteriors of the reactor halls and turbine building of Trawsfynydd Nuclear Power Station. It is, or was, the only nuclear power station in a UK National Park, so the relationship between it and the landscape had heightened importance. I suppose that "relationship" was Spence's job, along with Sylvia Crowe who advised on the extensive tree planting around the site.
http://canmore.rcahms.gov.uk/en/site/286966/details/trawsfynydd+nuclear+power+station/
Interestingly, when Trawsfynydd enters the later stages of the decommissioning process the two reactor halls will be reduced in height to minimise their impact on Snowdonia's landscape - the presumed obviousness of this step and the idea of "impact" met some challenges and there was an (unsuccessful) listing appeal. This BBC article captures some fleeting, but interesting glimpses of some different understandings of what is "proper" for landscape.
http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/wales/north_west/8307030.stm
A different understanding emerges from this article, which conjures an idea of revenge via landscape as an underlying motivation for reducing Trawsfynydd's height - as interesting as it is problematic. The case of Trawsfynydd attracts these different geographical imaginaries of what landscape should be, what it deserves, and how to address the undeserving/errant.
http://www.theguardian.com/artanddesign/2009/dec/21/snowdonia-nuclear-power-station-wales-architecture
Both articles hail from 2009 and suggest that the height reduction is imminent, but last time I drove past (2013) both reactor halls remained at full height...
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