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X-WR-CALDESC:Events for UCLA Sustainability
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DTSTART;TZID=America/Denver:20190301T073000
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DTSTAMP:20260407T220607
CREATED:20190122T192042Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20190122T192042Z
UID:7188-1551425400-1551456000@sustain.ucla.edu
SUMMARY:AIA: 2°C: A COTE|LA SYMPOSIUM  ON CLIMATE CHANGE
DESCRIPTION:The 2°C Symposium is an opportunity to learn essential technologies\, strategies and tools that address climate change at a critical time for our collective future. \nClimate Change is a reality; it is imperative that we educate\, develop innovative strategies\, and implement changes to mitigate its advance. \nOrganized by COTE AIA|LA\, 2 °C is a unifying platform for the public\, the architectural design community and the building industry to discuss and address the sustainability issues challenging our society today. 2°C will embrace current innovations in the industry and advance the dialogue occurring within these communities. \nThe symposium’s name references the Paris Climate Agreement which called for holding the increase in global average temperature to below 2 °Celsius above pre-industrial levels in hopes of preventing irreversible and damaging climatic patterns. \n  \n\n\nPREVIOUS YEARS\n\n\n2°C in 2018 \n\n\n\n\n\n\nKeynotes include: \n+ Kevin de León – Senate President pro Tempore Emeritus\n+ Eric Corey Freed\, RA\, LEED Fellow – Sustainability Disruptor\, Morrison Hershfield\n+ David Hertz\, FAIA LEED AP – Architect/Founder\, S.E.A. – Studio of Environmental Architecture / Skysource.org\n+ Dr. Chris Luebkeman – Fellow and Director of Global Foresight + Research + Innovation\, Arup\n+ Anthony Brower\, AIA\, LEED Fellow – Director of Sustainability\, Gensler \nVIEW DRAFT SCHEDULE \n\n\n\n\nWHEN | WHERE\nFriday\, March 1\, 2019 \n7:30AM-4:00PM \nLA Department of Water & Power \nDTLA \n\n\nFULL SCHEDULE\nSee draft list of speakers and panels HERE
URL:https://sustain.ucla.edu/event/aia-2c-a-cotela-symposium-on-climate-change/
LOCATION:CA
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DTSTART;TZID=America/Denver:20190301T083000
DTEND;TZID=America/Denver:20190301T190000
DTSTAMP:20260407T220607
CREATED:20190225T185141Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20190225T185141Z
UID:7252-1551429000-1551466800@sustain.ucla.edu
SUMMARY:UCLA ITS Downtown Forum: From Public Transit to Public Mobility
DESCRIPTION:DATE: Friday\, March 1\, 2019 \nLOCATION: Japanese American National Museum (Aratani Central Hall) \n100 N. Central Ave.\, LA\, CA 90012 \nREGISTRATION: 8:30AM – 9:00AM \nEVENT PROGRAM: 9:00AM – 5:00PM \nRECEPTION: 5:00PM – 7:00PM (Hirasaki Family Garden) \n\nGrappling with the dual trends of emerging new mobility services & declining public transit ridership\n\n \nRyan Russo will discuss how one of the nation’s newest DOTs has been leading the way with progressive policies that formally recognize and aim to redress past injutices within its diverse city. \nSeattle and King County Metro have put equity at the center of community engagement programs. Learn how Terry White has been creating more community participation and increasing transit service and ridership. \n \n\nWhat does the increasing role of private mobility options in cities mean for transportation agencies\, public transit providers\, cities\, and the traveling public? \nShould innovation be encouraged\, quashed\, or managed? \nMany regions in California are making big investments in public transit to create a viable alternative to driving. Are these burgeoning new services a threat or opportunity for these investments? \nThe 12th Annual Downtown Forum is a transit-accessible\, implementation-focused follow-up to the highly successful 2018 Arrowhead Symposium on pulbic sector strategies for evolving mobilty. The March 1 forum will focus on four key areas: \n\nSuccessful models of public-private partnerships providing public mobility services\nHow public agencies can effectively obtain and use data to manage public mobility\nIdentifying and implementing the most impactful changes to streets and transit service to double public transit ridership in the next decade\nCoordinating implementation of new technologies and mobility services to enhance equity and quality of life\n\n————————————————————————— \nDisclaimer: \n“As a condition to your attendance to all Institute of Transportation Studies Events\, you agree and irrevocably consent to your image and/or likeness being captured on photo\, film\, and/or video\, the benefit of which shall vest in Institute of Transportation Studies\, its licensees\, successors and assigns\, and shall be used for promotional\, marketing\, and educational purposes only.” \n\n\n\n\n\n\n\nTags\nThings To Do In Los Angeles\, CA Conference Government\n\n\n\n\n\n\nShare With Friends\n\n\n\n\nFacebook\nFacebook Messenger\nLinkedIn\nTwitter\nemail\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\nDate And Time\n\nFri\, March 1\, 2019 \n9:00 AM – 5:00 PM PST \nAdd to Calendar \n\nLocation\n\nJapanese American National Museum \n100 N. Central Ave. \nLos Angeles\, CA 90012 \nView Map \n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\nOrganizerUCLA Institute Of Transportation Studies\nOrganizer of UCLA ITS Downtown Forum: From Public Transit to Public Mobility \n\n\n\nOrganizer Twitter Profile UCLA_ITS\n\n\n\n\n\n\nThe mission of the UCLA Institute of Transportation Studies\, one of the leading transportation policy research centers in the United States\, is to support and advance cutting-edge research\, the highest-quality education\, and meaningful and influential civic engagement on the many pressing transportation issues facing our cities\, state\, nation\, and world today. UCLA ITS is a non-endowed research center housed in the UCLA Luskin School of Public Affairs\, and ITS faculty\, staff\, and students regularly collaborate with and receive support from the UCLA Lewis Center for Regional Policy Studies. ITS is a proud partner in the Pacific Southwest Region 9 University Transportation Center\, a federally-funded research network with seven other universities. \nThe transportation planning program at UCLA has been ranked second in the nation by Planetizen\, due in no small part to ITS support of transportation faculty and students. Since its inception in 1992\, ITS has supported hundreds of UCLA Luskin students with more than $2 million in scholarship funds\, which is relatively unique among UCLA research centers in both scope and scale. ITS also has enhanced the SPA curriculum by regularly funding special topics courses in transportation studies. This support has helped the Departments of Public Policy and Urban Planning (each of which offers specializations in transportation) attract many of the best and brightest transportation students to UCLA. Not surprisingly\, transportation policy and planning faculty and students have garnered an inordinate number of prestigious grants and awards\, many of which can be found on the ITS awards page. \nITS also actively links transportation research with policy and planning practice. Each fall since 1991\, ITS researchers co-host the UCLA Lake Arrowhead Symposium\, which brings leading transportation\, land use\, and environmental scholars together with top policy and planning practitioners from around the globe for a three-day retreat in the San Bernardino Mountains. In addition\, ITS  regularly hosts conferences and events in Los Angeles\, Sacramento\, and Washington\, D.C.\, along with dozens of public lectures on a wide variety of topics.
URL:https://sustain.ucla.edu/event/ucla-its-downtown-forum-from-public-transit-to-public-mobility/
LOCATION:CA
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DTSTART;TZID=America/Denver:20190301T090000
DTEND;TZID=America/Denver:20190301T170000
DTSTAMP:20260407T220607
CREATED:20190122T193111Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20190122T193129Z
UID:7197-1551430800-1551459600@sustain.ucla.edu
SUMMARY:UCLA ITS Downtown Forum: From Public Transit to Public Mobility
DESCRIPTION:From Public Transit to Public Mobility\nThe 12th Annual UCLA Downtown Los Angeles Forum on Transportation\, Land Use and the Environment\nFriday\, March 1\n9:00 am – 5:00 pm\nJapanese American National Museum\, Los Angeles\, CA\nREGISTER NOW\nThe 12th UCLA Institute of Transportation Studies Downtown Forum grapples with the public sector’s response to the dual trends of emerging new mobility services and declining public transit ridership. \nWhat does the increasing role of private mobility options in cities mean for transportation agencies\, public transit providers\, cities\, and the traveling public? Should innovation be encouraged\, quashed\, or managed? Many regions in California are making big investments in public transit to create a viable alternative to driving; are these burgeoning new services a threat or opportunity for these investments? \nThe 12th Annual Downtown Forum will explore implementation of the strategies discussed at the October 2018 Arrowhead Symposium\, a 3-day in-depth examination of what’s happening in urban mobility amidst an inundation of new options\, to how public agencies are adapting to accommodate\, manage\, and incorporate\, and compete with new options while continuing to serve the public interest. The Downtown Forum advances strategies to implementation in four areas seen as critical to the public sector’s response to new mobility: \n\nSuccessful models for the public sector to partner with private companies providing public mobility service\nHow public agencies can effectively obtain and use data to manage public mobility\nIdentifying and implementing the most impactful\, cost-effective incremental changes to streets and transit service in order to double public transit ridership in the next decade\nCoordinating implementation of new technologies and mobility services to enhance equity and quality of life
URL:https://sustain.ucla.edu/event/ucla-its-downtown-forum/
LOCATION:CA
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