Associate Professor and Director
Institute of Urban and Regional Development, UC Berkeley
Berkeley, California
Kristina Hill uses groundwater mapping and adaptation pathways to develop urban design alternatives for environmental justice and biodiversity. She uses metrics to estimate carbon storage to mitigate emissions and create habitat. Kristina has contributed to adaptation plans for a diverse group of US cities and Federal agencies, and was recently featured in an episode of Hidden Brain on adaptation. Her most recent writing is in the open-access Italian journal RiVista, where she connects health to climate adaptation (https://oaj.fupress.net/index.php/ri-vista/issue/view/820). Her PhD is from Harvard University, and her current writing project proposes strategies for adapting cities to flooding.
SAT-C02: How Do We Know What's Working? Getting Real with Landscape Metrics
Saturday, October 28, 2023
3:45pm – 5:00pm CT