Reimagining 2025: Living with Fire Design Challenge

Shefali J Lakhina
2 min readJun 6, 2021
Charred landscape around Mt. Hamilton, Santa Clara County (April 2021)
Location: Mt. Hamilton burn scars, Santa Clara County, CA. Picture by Shefali J Lakhina, 2 April 2021.

As part of our Reimagining 2025: Living with Fire program, Wonder Labs is delighted to announce three winning teams for our 2021 Living with Fire Design Challenge!

These incredible student-led teams are pursuing bold ideas to reimagine how their communities can live with fire in just, inclusive, and sustainable ways.

Each team is comprised of at least three students, one faculty advisor, and one community partner. For details on what the teams are working on, see here.

Teams receive an award of USD 10,000 each, access to a highly experienced mentor network, and pathways to future funding opportunities.

The awards will enable teams to co-develop ‘reimagining living with fire’ projects with communities at high risk of wildfire impacts.

Teams will have six months, from 1 June until 30 November 2021, to complete their projects. Learn more about the objectives of the Living with Fire Design Challenge here.


2021 Cohort
A team from the University of California Santa Barbara in partnership with the Ventura Regional Fire Safe Council will focus on the meaningful inclusion of socially vulnerable communities in the Community Wildfire Protection Plan (CWPP) in Ventura County’s Wildland Urban Interface. For details on their project see here.

A team from the University of California Santa Barbara in partnership with the Santa Barbara Botanic Garden will create science-informed recommendations on wildfire-centric plant maintenance, species selection, and placement. For details on their project see here.

A team from the University of Colorado Boulder in partnership with the CU Center for Sustainable Landscapes and Communities and the Boulder Watershed Collective aims to develop creative programming for wildfire adapted forest ecosystems and communities using a 100-acre forest thinning/meadow restoration project in Gold Hill, CO. For details on their project see here.

Mentors
We are also pleased to announce four inspiring mentors who will guide the Design Challenge teams with interdisciplinary thinking, industry best practices, and human-centered design thinking: Amy Berry (The Tahoe Fund), Daniel Godwin (The Ember Alliance), Faith Kearns (California Institute for Water Resources), & Greg Kochanowski, AIA, ASLA (LA Forum for Architecture & Urban Design). Learn more about our mentors here.

Follow project updates on Twitter: @WonderLabs1

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Shefali J Lakhina
Shefali J Lakhina

Written by Shefali J Lakhina

Shefali is co-founder of Wonder Labs, a social enterprise that catalyzes social and ecological innovations with communities on the frontline of climate impacts.

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