

#COLLABORATORY WETLANDS WATCH PROFESSIONAL#
Like the Chesterfield Heights project, the Collaboratory will foster student-faculty partnerships focused on resiliency design, offering practicum, studio, and capstone experiences central to many professional degrees. Starting in 2017, components from the designs will be implemented in Chesterfield Heights through a $120 million grant from the Department of Housing and Urban Development. Community input was a key part of the design process. With advice from members of the Hampton Roads Green Building Council, the student-faculty partnerships developed nature-based sea level rise adaptation designs for Chesterfield Heights, a historic neighborhood in Norfolk, Virginia burdened by recurrent flooding. This Virginia Sea Grant-funded project paired engineering and architecture students and faculty from Old Dominion University and Hampton University, creating a cross-institution, cross-discipline team. The Collaboratory is modeled after the Chesterfield Heights project, which took place during the 2014-2015 academic year. “We will use this funding to craft partnerships with Virginia Sea Grant, academia, and the private sector, leveraging funding and expertise to help move Virginia ahead in its race with the tides.” “This is a unique investment in the capability of Virginia’s academic institutions to help solve our state’s flooding and sea level rise challenges,” says Skip Stiles, executive director of Wetlands Watch, a non-profit organization working at the grassroots level to protect wetlands and adapt to sea level rise.

To support this effort, the Aduivans Family Foundation awarded Wetlands Watch a four-year grant to explore eco-friendly sea level rise solutions with Virginia’s colleges and universities through a new initiative called the “Resilience Research and Design Collaborative Laboratory,” a.k.a. In Hampton Roads, a region of coastal Virginia with the highest rate of sea level rise on the Atlantic Coast, local governments must adapt their communities to increasingly more severe and frequent flooding. What do you call a laboratory focused on fostering collaboration?Īnd that’s what Wetlands Watch in partnership with Virginia Sea Grant plan to create, as together they work to combat the tangible threats of sea level rise in coastal Virginia. Wetlands Watch and Virginia Sea Grant join forces Flooding in Norfolk, a city in Virginia’s Hampton Roads.
