Born in 1928 and raised in New England, Child had an early interest in art, gardening and history. Her family would often vacation on a farm located in southeastern Massachusetts, along the estuary of Westport River, which was built by her father-in-law, Josiah Child. According to the , Susan Child “cites this farm as having the deepest impression on her sensitivity to the built environment.” In 1950, Child graduated from Vassar College with a B.A. concentration in Art History and French. She then moved to Boston, and for the next two decades, raised her family and became an advocate for urban gardening prior to returning to school.
Career
In 1975, Child graduated from the Radcliffe Institute with a graduate certificate in landscape and environmental design. There she was particularly influenced by a course titled “Intellectual History of Garden Art,” taught by Diane McGuire. From 1975 to 1978, Child served as project manager with the City of Boston mayor's program for Revitalization of Vacant Lots and “The Greening of Boston” Neighborhood Improvement Program. She also coordinated several projects for the Parks and Recreation Department while working for the city. Child then went on to receive her master's degree in landscape architecture from the Harvard University Graduate School of Design, graduating in 1981. While at Harvard, Child was mentored by the chair of the Landscape Architecture Department, Peter Walker. An exhibition on the work of landscape architect Dan Kiley, titled “Modern Classicist” at the GSD, also informed Child's design ethos. Following her graduation from Harvard, Child founded her firm Child, Hornbeck Associates, Inc. in Boston with her former professor Peter Hornbeck. Three years later, when Hornbeck left the company, she founded Child Associates Inc., Landscape Architecture with Harvard classmate . The firm's projects included historic preservation work, residential projects, and the South Cove at Battery Park in New York. For this latter project, Child partnered with artist Mary Miss and architect Stan Eckstut to design a 3.5 acre park at the Hudson riverfront that recalled the natural coves of the Northeastern landscape. Child's work influenced many other landscape architects, including Anita Berrizbeitia, Chris Moyles, and John Grove. On November 13, 2018, Susan Child died in her home in New Haven, Connecticut.
Serrano, Nicholas. "Susan Child." The Cultural Landscape Foundation. https://tclf.org/susan-child Griswold, Mac. “Simple Gifts.” Garden Design 12, no. 5 : 40–47. Child, Susan. “Most Influential Landscapes.” Landscape Journal 12 : 187. Hiss, Tony. "At Land's Edge: A Contentment of Light and Shape." New York Times. Oct. 19, 1990. https://www.nytimes.com/1990/10/19/arts/at-land-s-edge-a-contentment-of-light-and-shape.html Kirkwood, Niall. “Abstracting Nature's Details: a planted path along a cove.” The Art of Landscape Detail. New York: John Wiley & Sons, 1999: 294–306. "Landscape Architect Susan Child Passes Away." LAND ASLA. November 27, 2018. https://www.asla.org/land/LandArticle.aspx?id=54570 Trulove, James Grayson. The New American Garden: Innovations in Residential Landscape Architecture. New York: Whitney Library of Design, 1998: 36–49.