Resilience by Design: Lessons from Climate-Impacted Communities
AIAU26-CxD05
Included in subscription
1
LU|HSW
Live course date: 04/23/2026 | 12:00 PM
Description
Thursday, April 23, 2026 | 12-1pm ET
Communities across the country are experiencing the impacts of a changing climate—from stronger storms to flooding, heat, and other climate-intensified hazards. Architects and landscape architects have an important role to play in helping communities prepare for these challenges and better recover after disasters.
This session will highlight the value of cross-disciplinary collaboration and community-driven design in building climate resilience. Last year, the Communities by Design (CxD) program hosted a project in Bakersville, North Carolina, after the small community was hit by Hurricane Helene. Architect Cheryl Morgan, based in Montgomery, Alabama, and landscape architect Aida Curtis, from Miami, Florida, will share lessons from their work on that project and other resilience-focused initiatives developed through the CxD program. Drawing from their experiences both within and beyond CxD, they will discuss how design professionals can work alongside local leaders, residents, and other experts to identify risks, strengthen community capacity, and implement strategies that help communities adapt to changing conditions.
Participants will gain practical insights into how collaborative design processes can support preparedness, recovery, and long-term resilience in communities facing increasing climate pressures.
Learning Objectives
Describe the role architects and landscape architects can play in helping communities prepare for and recover from climate-related hazards.
Explain how cross-disciplinary collaboration between designers, local leaders, and community members can strengthen resilience planning and implementation.
Identify strategies for incorporating community-driven approaches into resilience and climate adaptation projects.
Apply lessons from the Bakersville project and other Communities by Design initiatives to support resilience efforts in other communities.
Presented in partnership with Communities by Design (CxD).

Paola Capo is Senior Manager of Climate Action and Resilient Communities for AIA. She strives to provide architects and communities with the resources they need to create healthier, more sustainable, resilient, and equitable built environments. In her current role, she divides her time between managing the Disaster Assistance Program (assisting architects and AIA chapters before and after disaster events occur) and supporting Communities by Design, a program of the Architects Foundation that matches communities with interdisciplinary expertise to achieve community aspirations. In her time at AIA, Paola has supported several other portfolios related to sustainability and climate action including the 2030 Commitment program, the Materials Pledge, and the Committee on the Environment with a focus on capacity-building for architects, firms, and chapters.
Paola is currently pursuing a Masters in Emergency Management from Tulane University. In 2020, she completed IAP2’s Foundations in Public Participation Program, and in 2019 she participated in UC Berkeley’s [IN]City program to expand on her knowledge in urban design. She graduated from Georgetown University in 2017 with a degree in Science, Technology, and International Affairs, concentrating in Energy and the Environment.
With over 40 years of experience as a landscape architect, arborist, certified landscape inspector, and principal of Curtis + Rogers Design Studio, Aida Curtis is a leader in creating sustainable, inclusive spaces. As the head of South Florida’s premier Hispanic- and woman-owned landscape architecture firm, Aida has built a portfolio of award-winning projects spanning transportation, recreation, institutional, and civic spaces. Known for her innovative, cost-effective solutions, she excels in consensus-building and addressing challenges through clear and effective communication.
A trailblazer in leveraging landscape architecture to combat climate change, Aida chairs the National ASLA Biodiversity and Climate Action Committee, advising ASLA leadership on strategies to promote biodiversity, ecological restoration, and climate adaptation. She also serves on the board of the Landscape Architecture Foundation, advancing the role of landscape architects as climate leaders and inspiring future generations.
Among her many achievements, Aida led the Jose Marti Park Adaptive Redesign, Florida’s first WEDG-verified project and the second outside New York. As a member of the Technical Advisory Committee for WEDG V3.0, she played a pivotal role in promoting the adoption of WEDG verification for urban coastal projects by the City of Miami.
Aida Curtis’s visionary leadership continues to shape the future of sustainable design, ensuring that landscape architecture remains at the forefront of addressing environmental and societal challenges.
Cheryl is a licensed architect and Emerita Professor of Architecture in the School of Architecture, Planning and Landscape Architecture of Auburn University. In thirty years of teaching, she worked with architectural programs at Georgia Institute of Technology, Oklahoma State, and California College of Arts and Crafts. For the last 12 years of her teaching career, she was the Director of Auburn’s Urban Studio in Birmingham, Alabama.
Under Cheryl’s leadership, the Urban Studio’s Small-Town Design Initiative Program worked with over 100 small towns and neighborhoods in Alabama.
Morgan practiced architecture and urban design in the San Francisco Bay Area. She worked with a number of firms including Environmental Planning and Research, Gensler, and the Gruzen Partnership. Before coming to Auburn in 1992 she was an associate with the Berkeley firm of ELS/Elbasani and Logan. Morgan’s professional practice now focuses on urban design, community revitalization and graphic design. She is also an experienced facilitator.
In 2011 she was presented with the Alabama Chapter of the American Planning Association’s Distinguished Leadership Award recognizing her as a “Friend of Planning.” In 2012 she received one of Auburn University’s highest awards for Achievement in Outreach and in 2017 the Alabama State Council on the Arts named Cheryl one of the recipients of their bi-annual Governor’s Award.
In 2018 she gave a TEDx talk at TEDx Birmingham titled “Place Matters.” She is also active in the AIA’s Communities by Design program and has participated in a dozen R/UDATs including DATs in Dublin, Ireland, Rio de Janeiro, Brazil and Freetown, Sierra Leone.
She is a Fellow of the American Institute of Architects and a recipient of Alabama’s 2023 Gold Medal presented by the Alabama AIA to all Alabama FAIAs.