
Shady Strategies to Survive Climate Change
Tuesday, July 7th, 2026, Noon-1 PM ET
Shade can play a vital role in enhancing livability, human health, and sustainability, especially in historically temperate cities that face a future of extreme heat. As global climate change and urban development raises local temperatures, access to shade will soon become essential infrastructure for survivability and environmental justice. Learn how awnings, trees, and more thoughtful urban design can cool the city, reduce emissions, and make our public spaces safer and more accessible to all. Shade’s distribution reflects profound inequalities, and expanding access can help shape a cooler and fairer future.
Credit AIA/PHI – Pending
Learning Objectives
Featured Presenter – Sam Bloch
Sam Bloch is an environmental journalist and the author of Shade: The Promise of a Forgotten Natural Resource, a “compelling … conversation-starter” (NPR) and New Yorker Best Book of 2025. He has covered climate change and the built environment for publications including Places Journal, Slate, CityLab, The New York Times, and Landscape Architecture Magazine, and written about art and music for L.A. Weekly, Art in America, and Artnet, among others. Previously, he was a staff writer at The Counter, where he reported on food and agriculture. Bloch is a graduate of the Columbia Journalism School, and a former MIT Knight Science Journalism Fellow and Emerson Collective Fellow. He is based in New York City, where he lives with his partner and their son.