Can Philadelphia’s sustainability movement support policies and initiatives to strengthen urban manufacturing? Find out at this Urban Sustainability Forum.
This Saturday, March 31, New York City Council Member Letitia James, the Boerum Hill Association, the Park Slope Civic Council, and the Prospect Heights Neighborhood Development Council will host a workshop on Brooklyn’s transportation system.
Drawing from the innovative Brooklyn Greens Initiative and other neighborhood sustainability initiatives, Greening from the Ground Up Conference will showcase successes, make tools available and share strategies among community based organizations to harness collective action in the effort to make neighborhoods more environmentally friendly. Please join us for this free event.
Event Details
Friday, March 16, 2012 - 9:00am
Pratt Institute - Higgins Hall, 61 St. James Place, Brooklyn
This event aims to create an open forum for artists, urban dwellers, farmers, and food activists to exchange ideas and practices around responsible agricultural and environmental stewardship. There will be 8 free workshops that teach you how to cultivate and beautify your spaces using a variety of environmentally responsible strategies.
Event Details
Saturday, July 30, 2011 - 12:00pm to 4:00pm
Weeksville Heritage Center, 1698 Bergen Street, Brooklyn, NY 11213
Faith Leaders for Environmental Justiceinvites you to Faith & Earth
Pratt Center Architect Michael Kriegh will be co-leading a workshop on how houses of worship can be more sustainable and energy efficient.
Faith Leaders for Environmental Justice and The Riverside Chirch of New York have designed a full day of workshops meant to help clergy, lay leaders and individuals become good stewards of the earth. We will have workshops on such topics as:
Event Details
Friday, May 13, 2011 - 9:00am to 5:00pm
The Riverside Church of New York, 490 Riverside Dr, New York, NY 10027
Putting your rooftop to use can reduce your heating bills, prevent stormwater runoff, mitigate the city’s heat island effect, and even provide a peaceful garden retreat for your tenants. This workshop will explore how the rooftop, a critical element of the city’s infrastructure system, is often a missed opportunity for sustainable building elements. Hear from NYC experts and building owners on putting your roof to work, through green roofs, cool roofs and stormwater management.
As populations in cities around the world continue to grow, and gridlock becomes more prevalent, we are witnessing creative ways of dramatically repurposing the street infrastructure built decades ago. In some cities, this has included the removal of elevated highways, altering the transportation modes and reconnecting original neighborhoods. Other cities have intensified uses under existing expressway infrastructure, or upgraded landscaping and urban design features that make the areas more walkable and transit-friendly. New York City has many options to improve its largest thoroughfares. What should be our priority in addressing the fates of our elevated routes like the Sheridan Expressway? Panelists will discuss their experience with leveraging the potential of infrastructure in the context of urban design and other ideas for repurposing roadways to make them more appropriate for the way urban citizens now use them.
Introduction:
John Norquist, president of the Congress for the New Urbanism and former mayor of Milwaukee
Moderator:
Michael Grynbaum, The New York Times
Panelists:
Joan Byron, director of policy at the Pratt Center for Community Development
Marion Weiss, principal of Weiss/Manfredi
Vaughn Fauria, president of NewCorp Inc., based in New Orleans
Cost: $15, $10 MAS members and students. Register online or call 212 935 2075.
APA and AIA credits are pending.
This workshop will explore the benefits and challenges of using alternative energy and green building technologies in affordable multi-family developments and retrofits. Reducing fossil fuel use is imperative, but are advanced technologies the most cost-effective way for affordable housing developers to achieve their goals? Hear from those who have implemented solar thermal, photovoltaic, geothermal and passive house technologies in their own affordable buildings.
Panel Discussion moderated by fashion designer Stan Herman with:
Joe Ferrara, CB#5 Board Member & Garment Center Supplier Association
Adam Friedman, Pratt Center for CommunityDevelopment
Eric Gural, Newmark Knight Frank
Edgar Romney, Workers United
Yeohlee Teng, YEOHLEE Inc., CFDA, Board Member MAS
Madelyn Wils, NYC Economic Development Corporation
Sponsored by: Community Board 5, Parsons, Pratt Center for Community Development, Design Trust for Public Space, Save the Garment Center, and Municipal Art Society (MAS)
Building Hopeis a one-hour documentary chronicling the history and accomplishments of community development corporations across the nation, based on oral histories conducted with founders, leaders and supporters of 19 influential CDCs. Produced by the Pratt Center and Vanguard Films, Building Hope aired on PBS in 1994. See it here.