Two extraordinary places—Sanibel Island, Florida and Summit County, Colorado—offer models for how transportation professionals can strengthen communities under threat from environmental stressors. Because it turns out, we can do a lot. Our efforts to shape resilience planning, asset management, emergency operations, and reconstruction design can help special places plan for and recover from natural disaster.
Stronger Communities from Sea to SummitStronger Communities from Sea to SummitStronger Communities from Sea to SummitStronger Communities from Sea to SummitStronger Communities from Sea to SummitStronger Communities from Sea to Summit
Today, tribes, agencies, and companies throughout the Pacific Northwest, including Kittelson, are working with ingenuity and resources—and hope—to set policy, seek funding, and deliver projects that improve salmon habitat and passage. Here’s how.
Think Like a Salmon: How Transportation Infrastructure Can Support Fish HabitatThink Like a Salmon: How Transportation Infrastructure Can Support Fish HabitatThink Like a Salmon: How Transportation Infrastructure Can Support Fish Habitat
Change always require a catalyst. Someone, or something, deciding things cannot go on the way they are. In 2019, Oregon Department of Transportation (DOT) released…
Catalyzing Context-Sensitive Shifts in Transportation Planning & Engineering