In summer 2023, Associate Professor of Landscape Architecture Dr. Sarah Little conducted a STEM-focused workshop with interns from RestoreOKC. The workshop focused on the benefits of pollinators, pollinator-friendly plants and green spaces.
RestoreOKC is a community development organization focused on the restoration of health, environment, reconciliation and equity within Northeast Oklahoma City. The organization works to build resilient communities through various restoration projects of local homes, schools, jobs and farms. RestoreOKC also offers an intern program for middle and high school students that gives local youth the opportunity to engage in farming-related activities.
RestoreOKC volunteers.
Dr. Little has cultivated a strong relationship with RestoreOKC over the last several years. In spring 2021, Dr. Little and Dr. Bryce Lowery, associate professor of Regional and City Planning, worked with the organization on the Landscape Architecture Foundation’s Green New Deal Superstudio. At this one-time event, Landscape Architecture studios addressed decarbonization, job creation and social justice. Since that semester project, Dr. Little has participated in various career day events, volunteer days and, most recently, the pollinator workshop.
A RestoreOKC volunteer installing a pollinator garden.
Dr. Little worked with Dr. Ann Miller, farm director at RestoreOKC, to create a rewarding experience for the interns and empower them to increase access to nature in their own neighborhoods. At the workshop, Dr. Little and the interns discussed the value of pollinators and plants that support pollinator lifecycles. The interns then got to design unique pollinator gardens for 4’ x 8’ planting beds, incorporating nectar-producing flowers and drought tolerant plants.
RestoreOKC volunteers installing a pollinator garden.
Dr. Miller secured funding for the installation of these gardens at residential sites throughout NE OKC, allowing the interns to turn their garden concepts into reality. On Sept. 9, the interns engaged with local community members and led volunteer groups in the installation of their gardens. Dr. Little and the RestoreOKC team hope that these gardens will have a lasting positive impact on the region.
Dr. Little explained, “Historically, communities of color have had less access to green space which negatively impacts health and well-being. These pollinator gardens increase residents’ access to nature in addition to increasing pollinator populations that can increase farming yields at RestoreOKC.”
She continued, “Humans experience myriad benefits when exposed to nature. People live longer, experience less incidence of disease, can pay better attention, can regulate behavior, have increased immunity… the list goes on and on.”
Associate Professors Lee Fithian, Ph.D., and Elizabeth Pober have published a chapter in the recently released New Perspectives in Indoor Air Quality, published by Elsevier. Their contribution, titled “Chapter 16 – Architecture and the Challenges of Indoor Air Quality,” examines the relationship between architecture and indoor air quality.
Dr. Ladan Mozaffarian, Assistant Professor of Regional and City Planning, has been selected to serve as Co-Chair of the Association of Collegiate Schools of Planning (ACSP) Planners of Color Interest Group (POCIG) for the 2025–2027 term.
The Gibbs College of Architecture is proud to recognize Tahsin Tabassum, a recent graduate of the college’s Master of Regional and City Planning program and current doctoral student at the University of California, Irvine, for receiving the prestigious 2024–2025 American Planning Association (APA) Outstanding Student Award.