Daily Archives: October 15, 2022


Wednesday, October 26, 6:30 pm – 7:30 pm – A Song of Heat, Ice, and Water: Impact of Climate Change on Alpine Glacier and Water Resources, Online

Climate change is significantly impacting alpine glaciers around the world. Their response is similar though the water resource impacts vary. Over four decades Dr. Mauri Pelto, Ph.D. Professor at Nichols College, Science Advisory Board at NASA’s Earth Observatory. observed climate change impact on glaciers in the Pacific Northwest, and for three decades the impact on water resources in Central Massachusetts. Our focus will be on visual summaries of these observations and some commonalities to these different verses. He has been an Environmental Science professor at Nichols College since 1989 and is currently an Associate Provost. He is the Director of the North Cascade Glacier Climate Project since 1983 which measures the mass balance of three reference glaciers of the World Glacier Monitoring Service. Responsible for writing the chapter on Alpine Glaciers each year in the State of the Climate report for the Bulletin of American Meteorological Society. Member of Science Advisory Board for NASA Earth Observatory. Author of the American Geophysical Union blog “From a Glaciers Perspective”, writing one article a week on glacier response to climate change.

Sponsored by CounterAct Climate Change and New England Botanic Garden at Tower Hill. Free. Once registered, you will receive a Zoom link. To register, visit www.nebg.org


Tuesday, October 18, 6:30 pm – 8:00 pm – The Deep History of Amazonian Agroecological Urban Forests: Why Do They Matter Today?

In this Harvard Graduate School of Design talk on October 18 at 6:30 in the Piper Auditorium of Gund Hall in Cambridge, Ana María Durán Calisto will discuss the design principles of ancient Amazonian agroecological urban constellations; the ways in which colonialism disrupted (and continues to disrupt) Amazonian patterns of inhabitation and habitat construction; and the visions Amazonian urban history offers to inform our ability to reimagine future urban ecologies. Free and open to the public.

Ana María Durán Calisto is an architect, urban planner, environmental designer and scholar from Quito, Ecuador. In 2002, she founded the award-winning design group Estudio A0 with her husband, British-Punjabi architect Jaskran Kalirai. Estudio A0 has designed a diverse array of projects, at all scales, in close collaboration with its clients and community partners. Its building QPH obtained the first Leed Gold of continental Ecuador and was ranked 8th among the 500 best socio-environmental projects in Latin America at the 2015 Latin American Green Awards. In collaboration with Del Hierro AU and L + A Arquitectos, it won the competition for the Ikiam University campus, which eventually was awarded First Prize in the SDSN Amazonia Infrastructure Award, COP 21, in Paris. Its incremental housing scheme received Second Prize in a Social Housing Competition sponsored by UN Habitat. Estudio A0’s projects have been extensively published. Recent features include 30 arquitectos más relevantes de América Latina (Línea Editorial y Lexus Editores, 2020), Office Design (Booq Publishing, 2019), Company Gardens: Green Spaces for Retreat and Inspiration (Braun Publishing, 2019), and International Houses (Taschen, 2018).

Durán Calisto is currently a Ph.D. candidate in the urban planning department at UCLA. Under the advice of Susanna Hecht, she is writing a dissertation on the urban history of Amazonia, with a focus on indigenous systems of territorial planning and colonial disruptions. She is a member of the Science Panel for the Amazon, convened by SDSN & the UN. She co-authored its report ́s chapter on urbanization. In2022, she received the Mark Cousins Theory Award. Durán Calisto is a lecturer at the Yale School of Architecture and has taught research seminars and design studios at FADA-PUCE, the Harvard GSD, Columbia University, the University of Michigan, IAAC, Universidad Católica de Temuco, and UCLA ́s Institute for the Environment and Sustainability. She curated the XV Quito Architecture Biennial: Visible Cities (2006) and was National Curator for the IX BIAU. She co-edited the books Ecological Urbanism in Latin America (2019), Beyond Petropolis: Designing a Practical Utopia in Nueva Loja (2015), IV Taller Internacional de Vivienda Popular (2007). 

Anyone requiring accessibility accommodations should contact the events office at (617) 496-2414 or events@gsd.harvard.edu.


Thursday, October 27, 6:00 pm – 9:00 pm – Night of Illumination at Garden in the Woods

Night of Illumination is back and tickets are on sale now! All Native Plant Trust personal members are eligible to purchase tickets to our annual members-only fall event, Night of Illumination. Stroll along paths at Garden in the Woods lit by more than 1,000 luminaria on Thursday, October 27, 2022. There will be food for purchase brought to the Garden by Anzio’s Brick Oven Pizzeria food truck. Join us for this wonderful evening filled with intriguing sights and seasonal strolls.

Tickets must be purchased online and in advance. There will be no on-site ticket sales on the night of the event. 

Adults – $14.00 (18+)

Children – $7.00 (6-17)

Children 5 and under – free 

Parking for Night of Illumination will be available at Hemenway Elementary School (729 Water Street, Framingham, MA 01701), Potter Road Elementary School (492 Potter Road, Framingham, MA 01701), King Elementary School (454 Water Street, Framingham, MA 01701), and Cameron Middle School (215 Elm Street, Framingham, MA 01701). There will be a continuous shuttle bus service throughout the evening to bring you to and from the Garden.

Night of Illumination is an exclusive event for Native Plant Trust members and their guests, but tickets will go quickly. Get your tickets today!