About the Webinar
How do we halve the emissions of the built environment this decade? How can landscape architects, architects, planners and engineers be agents of mitigation and systems change? Kelly Alvarez Doran will speak to the unique agency and advocacy landscape architects and designers have to address the challenges we face, sharing recent work focused on low-carbon, climate adaptive design approaches to landscape and public infrastructure.
Wednesday, January 15 at 2:00 ET
Note: This event will be held in English with French translation services provided.
To learn more about life cycle assessments, register for an in-person workshop near you.
The Royal Architectural Institute of Canada (RAIC) has partnered with the National Research Council of Canada (NRC) to train members of the planning and design community through a high-quality, hands-on, case study-based Whole Building Life Cycle Assessment (LCA) curriculum. The RAIC is proud to collaborate with Ha/f Climate Design (Kelly Alvarez Doran) to organize in-person workshops and has welcomed members of the CSLA to participate in these events.
Upcoming workshops include: Vancouver (Feb. 3), Calgary (Feb. 5), Regina (Feb. 7), Halifax (May 22), and Montreal (May 31).
Attend for free! The CSLA will support registration for up to 30 members (Full, Associate, and Students).
Contact Hope at advocacy@csla-aapc.ca for a registration code.
For more information and to register for an event near you, visit the RAIC website. Each workshop has a limited number of spots, so please reserve yours today.
About the Presenter: Kelly Alvarez Doran
Kelly Alvarez Doran is a father, architect, educator, and activist. His holistic approach to the design of the built environment has been shaped by his experiences working across the world first in the resource development sector and at MASS Design Group’s East African office where led the design and implementation of several of MASS’s projects, notably the award-winning Munini District Hospital and the Rwanda Institute for Conservation Agriculture. Working in these contexts brought about a profound sense of a building’s provenance and the scales of social and environmental impacts inherent to the built environment.
In 2020, Kelly established the Half Research Studio at the University of Toronto to catalyse a conversation around the embodied carbon and life cycle impacts of buildings in Canada. The graduate level studio has engaged over 20 leading offices, trained 34 students, and has published internationally acclaimed research demonstrating how and where a building’s upfront impacts reside. The Studio’s research underpinned the embodied carbon policies co-authored by Kelly that were recently adopted by the City of Toronto.
Kelly is a regular speaker, writer, and advocate for the integration of life cycle assessments into design thinking. He is a Senior Fellow of Architecture 2030, a member of the Royal Architectural Institutes of Canada’s Committee of Regenerative Environments.
This webinar is offered through landADAPT:
A new continuing education program to promote building capacity through professional development opportunities for Canadian landscape architects, supported by Natural Resources Canada’s Climate Change Adaptation Program.