Peter Arnold

Peter Arnold serves as Director of Research at the Arid Lands Institute at Woodbury University. His work focuses on how water, energy and climate change impact the design of the built environment, and how design can positively impact water supply, energy inputs, and climate change mitigation and adaptation efforts. Peter’s current research uses geospatial environmental modeling to assess the potentials for capture and reuse of stormwater, in both urban and rural drylands settings. The modeling may in turn suggest constructive strategies for a well-adapted built environment.

Within an urban setting, Peter’s research focuses on maximizing the recovery, use, and reuse of rain and stormwater, at both local and regional scales. Environmental geospatial modeling coupled with fine-grained remote sensing analyses aid in identifying likely sources and quantities of stormwater and may suggest the shifts necessary within land use and zoning patterns to maximize these potential resources. Peter’s urban research has been funded by the US Department of Housing and Development, Metropolitan Water District, and private foundations.

Peter’s rural research focuses on developing an environmental modeling and geodesign prototype to simulate, at a watershed scale, stormwater behavior. The work entails substantial collaborative fieldwork in Northern New Mexico where ALI has run a summer field station since 2007. The goal is to identify and implement appropriate recapture and control techniques for slowing erosion and deposition processes within ephemeral stream systems in the arid West. Ultimately, the purpose of the modeling is to support traditional agricultural communities adapting to hydrologic variability brought on by climate change. ALI’s rural work is contracted by the New Mexico Environmental Department and funded through EPA Clean Water Act, Region 6.

Peter studied environmental design and physics at CU Boulder and earned his M.Arch. at SCI-Arc. He has taught design and geospatial research studios at Woodbury and UCLA, and has photographed the infrastructural landscapes of the west extensively.

Peter is affiliated with LARC and serves as a member of the Stakeholder Technical Advisory Committee for LA County Department of Public Works LA Basin Stormwater Study, and the Technical Advisory panel the LA Department of Water and Power Stormwater Capture Master Plan.

Hadley Arnold

Hadley Arnold serves as Executive Director of the Arid Lands Institute at Woodbury University. ALI’s mission is to advance design innovation at the nexus of water, energy, and climate change.

Hadley work focuses on bringing water scarcity and climate adaptation to the forefront of design education, practice, and policy in drylands. At the same time, ALI brings together designers with scientists, policy makers, and citizens to harness the leadership potential of design vision. Hadley has built ongoing collaborations between ALI and the American Institute of Architects, public water agencies throughout the region, UCLA’s Water Resources Group, and design programs in 28 states and 15 countries. ALI research and programs have been funded by the US Department of Housing and Urban Development, the US Environmental Protection Agency, Metropolitan Water District and private gifts and grants.

In the classroom, Hadley’s work focuses on hydrologic urbanism. How do urban planning, architectural design, and building systems, ancient and contemporary, uncouple water from energy; embrace hydrologic variability; sow social equity; and support diverse cultures to adapt and persist in drylands? She has a particular interest in the role history, the arts, and the humanities can play in informing contemporary engineering and the design of resilience.

ALI’s current public initiative, Divining LA, is a multi-year collaboration designed to advance research, design vision, and ambitious public engagement for a water-resilient future.

Hadley received her BA from Harvard and her M.Arch. from SCI-Arc. She has taught urban history, theory, and design studios at SCI-Arc, UCLA, and Woodbury. She has lectured extensively in the US and abroad.

Stephen Aron

Field

United States

Research Interests

North American Frontiers, Borderlands, and American West

Notes

Chair, Institute for the Study of the American West, Autry National Center

Current Projects

Can We All Just Get Along: An Alternative History of the American West.

The American West: A Very Short Introduction (under contract with Oxford University Press).

Arkhat Abzhanov

Donat Agosti

Douglas Alsdorf

Chris Anderson

Eric Anderson

Nicola Anthony

Vanessa Apkenas