Tag: Northeastern University

  • Thursday, May 7, 12:00 noon – 1:00 pm Eastern – Green Roofs on Campus: Living Infrastructure for Climate Actions, Learning, and Legacy, Online

    As institutions of higher education accelerate climate commitments, campus landscapes are increasingly called upon to perform as living infrastructure. This Climate Week–themed webinar on May 7 at noon explores how green roofs can advance sustainability goals while enriching campus life, operations, and learning through three university case studies: Harvard Business School, Northeastern University, and North Shore Community College. Designed for campus sustainability directors and facilities managers, the session examines how green roofs deliver measurable benefits—from stormwater management and urban heat reduction to biodiversity, wellness, and experiential learning. Speakers will share design strategies, maintenance realities, and performance outcomes across diverse campus contexts, including how these projects support institutional reporting and benchmarking frameworks such as AASHE STARS.

    ​Presented by Recover Green Roofs during Boston Climate Week, this webinar recognizes the unique role higher education leaders play in shaping not only resilient campuses, but also the next generation of environmental stewards—demonstrating how today’s infrastructure decisions can become tomorrow’s teaching tools.

    Register at https://luma.com/azdr6lbj. Recover Green Roofs is a design-build firm specializing in the design, installation, and maintenance of green roofs, including rooftop gardens, farms, and amenity spaces. Recover has designed and built residential, commercial, and institutional buildings across New England and beyond for over a decade, emphasizing the stacking benefits that a green roof provides to its community, local ecosystems, and the environment at large. We strive to create long-lasting, thriving green roofs that aid in recovering nature in our built environment in order to support healthier communities and more resilient cities. For more information, visit www.recovergreenroofs.com and follow us on LinkedIn.

    By registering for this event, you agree to share your registration information with the organizers of Boston Climate Week

  • Saturday, March 21, 10:00 am – 5:00 pm – Gardeners Gathering

    Celebrate the start of the gardening season! The 50th Annual Gardeners’ Gathering brings Boston-area growers of all kinds together for a free day full of informative workshops, engaging exhibitors, networking, and inspiration.

    ¡Celebre el inicio de la temporada de jardinería! La 50º Reunión Anual de Jardineros reúne a productores de todo tipo del área de Boston para un día gratuito lleno de talleres informativos, expositores atractivos, networking e inspiración.

    If you are interested in tabling at this event, click here.

    If you are interested in having an ad in the program, or sponsoring the event, click here.

    If you are interested in volunteering, click here.

    If you are interested in presenting a workshop, fill out this form.

    The program is sponsored by The Trustees and is free and open to all. The event takes place in Shillman Hall at Northeastern University.

  • Tuesday, February 11, 5:15 pm – 7:30 pm – Northern Exposure: American Military Engineering in the Arctic Circle

    The Massachusetts Historical Society is sponsoring a lecture at its headquarters at 1154 Boylston Street in Boston on February 11, beginning at 5:15 pm, by Gretchen Heefner of Northeastern University, with comment by Christopher Capozzola of MIT,, as part of its Environmental History Seminars, entitled Northern Exposure: American Military Engineering in the Arctic Circle. From the late 1940s through the 1960s, U.S. military engineers constructed and maintained a vast, though largely unknown, infrastructure of military facilities throughout the Far North. This talk examines how these engineers explored the Arctic regions, what sorts of information they accumulated about it, and ultimately what happened to that information once it was released from military constraints. Free, but registration requested at www.masshist.org.

  • Monday, April 8, 6:00 pm – 8:30 pm – Emerald Necklace Conservancy Annual Meeting

    Join the Emerald Necklace Conservancy at our 2019 Annual Meeting as we explore the intersection of parks and health with several engaging short presentations. Also hear from President Karen Mauney-Brodek as we recap the success of our 20th Anniversary and share plans for 2019 and beyond. Presentations will be followed by a Q&A session with our speakers and a reception. The event takes place Monday, April 8 from 6 – 8:30 at the Linda K. Paresky Conference Center, Simmons University, 300 The Fenway, Boston.

    Speakers Include:

    • Sara Jensen Carr, Assistant Professor of Architecture, Urbanism and Landscape at Northeastern University
    • Angela Cleveland, AICP, Director of Client Services, Kim Lungdren Associates and President of the MA Chapter of the American Planning Association

    …with more to be announced!

    Registration is FREE, but strongly recommended.

  • Saturday, March 23, 10:00 am – 5:00 pm – 44th Annual Gardener’s Gathering

    Celebrate the start of the gardening season on March 23 from 10 – 5 at Shillman Hall, Northeastern University, 115 Forsyth Street in Boston. The 44th Annual Gardeners’ Gathering brings Boston-area gardeners together for a free day full of informative workshops, engaging exhibitors, networking, and inspiration. Held at Northeastern University, the Gathering features more than two dozen workshops on everything from Healthy Soil to Urban Foraging. Urban homesteaders can learn about keeping bees or chickens, making fermented pickles, and growing gourmet mushrooms. Gardeners can hone their skills with workshops on garden planning, managing pests and diseases, and more.

    This year’s Gathering will feature special guest speaker Aziz Dehkan, Executive Director of the New York City Community Garden Coalition. Aziz is an activist, community organizer, former organic farmer, and a tireless member of #Resist. He has worked for many social and environmental organizations including Mother Jones, The Coalition for the Homeless, The Fortune Society, and Peace Action Network of NY. Aziz will address the history, current state, and future of community gardens in NYC, looking at them through the lens of social justice and climate change protection. He’ll speak to gentrification and racial inequality and delve into how community gardens can be in the vanguard of climate change monitoring, adaption, and mitigation.

    Mayor Walsh will deliver a keynote address and present the annual Community Garden Awards to an outstanding Rookie Garden of the Year, Most Valuable Gardener, and Hall of Fame garden.

    A diverse array of local environmental and urban agriculture organizations will share their work in the exhibitors’ gallery. Register in advance at http://www.thetrustees.org/things-to-do/metro-boston/event-43119.html

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  • Friday, December 14, 4:00 pm – 6:00 pm – Plant Shadows: Cyanotypes by Joan Dix Blair

    Plant Shadows explores print making through cyantotypes — objects arranged on light-sensitive paper and exposed to UV light or sunshine, to produce images. This plein-air process vividly captures the silhouettes of plants, weeds, and shrubs from artist Joan Dix Blair’s garden in the Berkshires. Influenced by the botanical work done in the 1840s by Anna Atkins who recorded seaweed plants using cyanotype, this form of expression is a new medium for Joan Dix Blair, a printmaker whose solo and group exhibitions include Northeastern University’s Gallery 360, Boston, MA, Highpoint Center for Printmaking, Minneapolis, MN, and the Washington Printmakers Gallery, Wahington, DC. Her exhibition at the Garden brings together a current body of work created over the past two years in her Williamstown, MA studio. Image courtesy of Daily Hampshire Gazette.

    A gallery reception is scheduled for Friday, December 14, 4-6 p.m. at theBerkshire Botanical Garden’s Center House Leonhardt Galleries, 5 West Stockbridge Road, Stockbridge, MA. The exhibition will be on view from December 15 at 11 am through March 1, 2019 at 4 pm. For more information visit https://www.berkshirebotanical.org/events/plant-shadows-cyanotypes-joan-dix-blair

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  • Thursday, November 15, 6:30 pm – 8:30 pm – 2018 Friends of the Public Garden Members Reception

    The Reception is full, but contact Rachel Hangley below for membership information. Marie Law Adams and Dan Adams, founders of Landing Studio, will be discussing their vision and design for Charlesgate Park and sharing the community-led plan to revitalize this long-neglected area. Reclaiming the lost segment of the Commonwealth Avenue Mall at the intersection of three historic park spaces; the Commonwealth Avenue Mall, the Fens, and the Esplanade, their innovative plan will create new multi-modal connections to reconnect the park systems of Boston.

    Landing Studio is an architecture and urban design practice. Their work is focused on the design of industrial and infrastructural systems in cities through shared-use landscapes, buildings, light installations, festivals, exhibitions, tours, and industry/community operations agreements. Additionally, Dan is the Director of the School of Architecture at Northeastern University, and Marie is a Lecturer in Urban Design at MIT.

    The event takes place Thursday, November 15 from 6:30 – 8:30 at The Omni Parker House, 60 School Street, Boston. Contact Rachel Hangley at the Friends if you’d like to inquire about your Membership status: 617-723-8144 or email: rachel@friendsofthepublicgarden.org. Not a Member yet or need to Renew? You can join today. Click on https://friendsofthepublicgarden.org/2018/10/09/november-15th-2018-members-reception-2018/ to join or renew your membership.

  • Saturday, March 3, 9:00 am – 6:00 pm – Local Environmental Action Conference 2018

    Registration is open for the Toxics Action Center’s Local Environmental Action 2018. Register now for the opportunity to join community leaders, environmental advocates and activists from across New England for an exciting day of skills training, networking, and inspiration. Whether you have been to every conference or are attending for the first time, be sure not to miss this amazing opportunity to connect and grow our grassroots movement.

    Join community leaders, environmental justice advocates and activists from across the region to build skills, discuss new ideas, and be inspired for the work ahead. Co sponsored by Clean Water Action, Sierra Club Massachusetts, Irving House at Harvard, Environmental Massachusetts, 350 Mass for a Better Future, the League of Women Voters, Northeastern University, CRECE, Elders Climate Action, MassPirg, New England Wind, Protect, Mothers Out Front, and the National Wildlife Federation.

    Keynote speakers are Loretta Ross and the Reverend Mariama White-Hammond. Loretta Ross started her career in the women’s movement in the 1970s, working at the D.C. Rape Crisis Center, NOW, the National Black Women’s Health Project, and SisterSong Women of Color Reproductive Justice Collective, among other social justice organizations. She is one of the co-creators of the Reproductive Justice framework and has lectured extensively on human rights, racism, appropriate whiteness, Calling In the Calling Out Culture, and violence against women. Her most recent publication is Reproductive Justice: An Introduction co-written with Rickie Solinger and published in 2017. She was the Co-Director of the 2004 March for Women’s Lives with 1.15 million participants. Rev. Mariama White-Hammond serves on the ministerial staff at Bethel African Methodist Episcopal Church where she is the Minister for Ecological Justice and the Interim Youth Pastor. She is committed to engaging the faith community, and particularly Black church, on climate change and ecological justice issues. Rev. Mariama challenges the Christian church to be responsive to issues like street violence, mass incarceration, climate change, AIDS, food security, and human rights. From 2001-2014, Rev. Mariama was the Executive Director of Project HIP-HOP (Highways Into the Past – History, Organizing and Power), where she used the arts as a tool to raise awareness about social issues and help young people to find their voice and share their ideas with the world. She speaks throughout the country and serves on both local and national boards and committees like the New England Grassroots Environmental Fund, Clean Water Action and Green the Church. In addition to her work at Bethel AME Church, Rev. Mariama is also a fellow with the Green Justice Coalition, a collaborative of people-of-color-led environmental groups. She was the MC for both the Boston Women’s March and Boston People’s Climate Mobilization.

    This is a fragrance free event, to be held at Northeastern University. Thanks for bringing your own water bottle and coffee mug. Have questions about the event? Email us at info@toxicsaction.org. The complete list of 16 workshops may be found at http://www.localenvironmentalaction.org/workshops1.html. Individual tickets $55, student tickets $25, tickets for members of co-sponsoring groups $35.

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  • Wednesday, November 29, 6:00 pm – Unraveling Ancient Life in Massachusetts: Fossils, Paleobiology, and Geologic Maps

    For two hundred years, geologists and paleontologists have mapped sedimentary sequences and interpreted the ancient environments they represent. Professor Richard H. Bailey, professor of geology in the Department of Marine and Environmental Sciences at Northeastern University, will unearth the evolutionary history of Massachusetts fossils, their value in understanding the geologic development of the region, and their historical depiction in maps. The lecture will take place Wednesday, November 29 at 6 pm in the Boston Public Library’s Central Library on Boylston Street.

    Following the talk, audience members will be invited to enjoy a guided tour of the Map Center’s exhibit, Beneath Our Feet: Mapping the World Below. Free.

  • Tuesday, October 10, 5:15 pm – 7:30 pm – Early American Environmental Histories

    James D. Rice, Tufts University, will speak on Tuesday, October 10 at the Massachusetts Historical Society, 1154 Boylston Street, Boston,  beginning at 5:15 pm, with commentary by Christopher Parsons of Northeastern University. This presentation speaks to questions raised in a recent workshop at the Huntington on early American environmental history. How do timespan and scale change our understanding of historical relationships between people and their environments? What new light does environmental history shed on topics such as race, gender, or law? What can early Americanists contribute to the field of environmental history as a whole? Free and open to the public, but RSVP required. To RSVP: email seminars@masshist.org or call (617) 646-0579.