Climate360 Podcast series - CityLab
- s-architecture

- Sep 25
- 2 min read

CityLab is delighted to collaborate on a new podcast series that will take a broad view of how climate change impacts our world, and some amazing people rising to its challenges.
Join us as we explore how climate impacts health, economics, politics, science, farming, manufacturing and everything else. Not just the challenges but also the rich community of innovators and activists, professionals and academics, makers and motivators, who are helping us to meet a changing climate.

Professor Dan Hill introduces the Australian Carbon Reduction Roadmap, a collaborative initiative with Gerard Reinmuth of UTS and a host of other collaborators. The Roadmap translates Paris Agreement commitments to local targets, which has huge implications for the carbon intensity of building.
Joost Bakker is an Australian environmental designer and sustainability advocate whose design of the Regenerative Futures Studio for Woodleigh School exemplifies the potential of a low carbon world.
Third generation farmer Doug Rennie talks about regenerative farming, soil health and the many benefits of growing hemp in his farm in western NSW. We join him as he joins forces with a range of innovators to turn hemp into building products.
Professor Paula Jarzabkowski specialises in the intersection of insurance, risk, and climate change. She talks about the growth in uninsured housing, and how land-use planning and building codes need urgent reform.
s-architecture is intended for scholars of Architecture (academe, practice, students, and the public). The list posts scholarship and grant opportunities, academic jobs, calls for papers, notices of conferences which will be of interest to academic staff, postgraduate students, and those in the profession with a scholarly turn of mind.
This blog/email and any attachments are confidential and intended solely for the recipient(s) listed. If you are not the intended recipient, please notify the sender immediately and delete this email. Any unauthorised review, use, disclosure, or distribution is strictly prohibited. While we take precautions to protect against viruses and malware, we cannot guarantee that this email is free from harmful elements. The views expressed in this email do not necessarily reflect those of s-architecture or the Association of Architecture Schools of Australasia (AASA).



