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Tag: DCRP Reflections

DCRP Summer Musings

In a summer unlike any other, DCRP students continue to find ways to engage with their communities and have meaningful experiences. This week, we are sharing updates and reflections from four students.


Emily Gvino

This summer, Emily Gvino is completing her Gillings School of Global Health practicum requirements with the Carolinas Integrated Sciences and Assessments (CISA), a sub-organization under NOAA as part of their Climate Program Office’s Regional Integrated Sciences and Assessments Program. CISA’s work focuses on applied research and interventions to mitigate the impacts of climate change on health. Emily is working with Dr. Ferdouz Cochran, concentrating on community engagement regarding their heat tools. The primary deliverable is designing a survey for their healthcare coalition and public health stakeholders who use or could be using their heat index tools. The team is hoping to also measure their perception of risk related to climate change, the information they need to understand how climate change impacts their work, and the barriers or opportunities they experience in this area. Emily hopes to utilize the data gathered from the survey to build the foundation for her Master’s Project this coming year. The secondary delivery will be a virtual engagement playbook to inform CISA’s outreach and engagement efforts with stakeholders in North Carolina and South Carolina during the pandemic.

Heat waves and severe climate disaster events result in increased human morbidity, financial and economic losses, exacerbated mental health issues, among many other impacts that are concerning due to environmental justice and social equity issues. The solutions to this will have to be interdisciplinary: changes in human behavior, public health interventions, policy implementation, and adaptive land use planning, which is why Emily would like to explore these topics for her MP.

In addition, Emily is continuing her academic year graduate assistantship by working part-time for the Lineberger Comprehensive Cancer Center’s Cancer Prevention and Control Program (CPC). Her primary projects involve leading quality control and coding efforts for the newly-launched Vaping Prevention Resource; administrative support for the PopSci Junior Faculty program and other CPC efforts; and original research and manuscript writing with faculty researchers.


Eli Powell

As a part of my internship with the Transportation Planning Team at the Town of Chapel Hill, I have taken on the completion of a comprehensive inventory of all bicycle parking and maintenance resources within Town limits. This inventory, which started in May and is scheduled to be completed sometime during the fall, will double as my Master’s Project and be available to the public as an interactive webmap.

Bike Racks near University Mall

Anna Gustines

Living in suburban Texas this summer has given me a new appreciation for permeable edges. Here, fences that keep residents in, others out, and people from each other separate the landscape into neat boxes. In this landscape, a car becomes necessary to access natural, recreation, and social experiences. This experience has reaffirmed for me the need to create recreational spaces with permeable edges and open access for all. 


Katie Koffman

When we started at DCRP in the fall, I don’t think any of us imagined we would go through a global pandemic together. I’ve always thought about the field as a highly collaborative, interactive space to problem solve, but this tests those assumptions. However, every day, I see how this pandemic is affecting us – people are passionate about economic, social, and environmental issues and they’ve doubled-down on their desire to solve wicked planning problems. Is this situation idea for our degrees? No. But I think it has made us more aware of the greatest gaps and needs going forward.

A New Normal: DCRP Catching up via Zoom

Featured Image: New East Building. Photo Credit: Alison Salomon

Spring Break Reflections and Photos

The following is a sample of observations many of the DCRP Master’s students had during their spring break. We curated a sample from students who stayed around the Triangle to those who traveled internationally.

Taylor McAdam

I went to the transit museum in Brooklyn and learned about the history of New York’s subway system. There was a special exhibit on the construction of the new Second Avenue Subway (this exhibit pic is of 86th Street escalator tunnel) and it was fascinating to see how construction methods and working conditions have changed from the time the first subways were built in the 1900s. Also a few things that haven’t changed: the tunnel boring crew is still part of the Sandhogs union and many of the people who are building the Second Avenue Subway are part of a lineage of Sandhog men going back 3-4 generations.

Sarah Long

Over spring break, with my nearly-developed planner’s lens focused, I picked up on the evidence of poor planning policy in the narrative tradition of Black forms of music. This evidence is obvious in the US. Descriptions of failed housing, economic, and social policy and can be found from soul music of the 1970’s through current hip-hop music. This tradition is not only found in the US, but throughout the African Diaspora.  My conclusion was that it’s better to dance your way through processing external maladies. The Temptations “Ball of Confusion” sprang this thought.

Christian Kamrath

I was in Mexico City, Mexico, during the break. This photo is a view from the bus that travels from D.F. [Distrito Federal – AKA Mexico City] towards Teotihuacan. In Teotihuacan, the city developed multi-family housing units, which was extremely unique for its time. They had over 2,000 ‘apartment buildings’ that were relatively large and luxurious compared to ‘commoner’ housing in other parts of the world. Click here to read more about it.

Alison Solomon

A picture of my brother and me standing underneath an external fuel tank that was used during testing for the Space Shuttle in the late 1970s. In 2013, it was on its way from the Kennedy Space Center to a museum exhibit near Cape Canaveral. It comfortably completed the first leg of its trip on-board a cargo ship in the Atlantic Ocean, but things went off course upon its arrival at the Green Cove Springs port. Officials suddenly realized they would need to shut down several highways and create adequate clearance in order for the fuel tank to finish its journey – something they apparently overlooked when planning the trip. It has been sitting at the old naval base for the last four years, dreaming of outer space and a chance to complete its terrestrial expedition.

Pasan Perera

I visited Havana, Cuba, and learned about the ‘machina’ system. The machina taxi system is a ride-share system frequently used by the Cuban people, which employs the use of classic 1950s American cars. It provides residents with affordable transportation services (about 50 cents per ride within the Havana city limits) while providing flexible employment opportunities.

Jani Radhakrishnan

I went to London, England. While I was there I saw this mixed use office and residential development and I just thought the architecture was beautiful, especially mixing green elements with metal. And lots of people were enjoying the green space and I just thought it was beautiful 🙂

Karla Jimenez

For the break, I wanted to escape the small town life by immersing myself in one of the biggest and arguably most beautiful cities in the U.S.: Los Angeles. I say arguably because I was surprised by L.A.’s natural offerings. We usually hear about the city of Angels as a sprawling mess full of traffic and vapidly beautiful people, but we don’t often see or hear about the wonderful urban escapades the city offers. In under an hour–luckily I avoided major traffic–you can overlook the city up on the hills, lose yourself in the pacific ocean, or check out one of the national parks surrounding the metro area. This trip helped me understand why so many people seem so happy in LA. [Note: as far as affordability, equity, natural hazards, and pollution is concerned, I can’t speak for the area].

Nate Seeskin

This is a photo taken in jest of Pasan Perera lying supine on a country road on the Albemarle-Pamlico Peninsula in eastern, NC. We were stranded for about 30 minutes after getting our rental car stuck in the mud when looking to make a u-turn. There was nothing we could do as pedestrians but wait for our rescue.