Our Students
- Environmental design student Ben Pesso was selected to continue his studio work with Mary Mattingly, the CU Art Museum’s artist-in-residence, on a project in New York City.
- Third-year environmental design students in Lecturer Susan Atkinson's architecture studio collaborated with Mary Mattingly, CU Boulder Artist-in-Residence, on the upcoming exhibition "Last Library: Reading Rooms, Bridges and tools for Integrating Ecological Ethics into Practice."
- This fall, Instructor Emily Greenwood's senior landscape architecture studio is working with the City of Boulder Parks and Recreation Department to design Violet Park in North Boulder.
- Third-year students in Seth Wilberding's landscape architecture studio collaborated with award-winning, Brooklyn-based artist, Mary Mattingly on her upcoming project Swale II, a floating food forest installed on a barge that will be docked on the Harlem River in New York City.
- On Thursday, September 26, 21 students were recognized at the Month of Modern CU Student Design Awards with eight different design awards.
- The Program in Environmental Design honored 26 students for their design scholarships and awards. Each spring, the program awards students with over $50,000 in scholarships and awards.
- CU-Boulder environmental design students help the owners of a local artisanal pasta business grow their brand. Originally posted by Modern in Denver.
- Nicholas is from San Diego, California. He's a full-time student and spends his weekends with the Air National Guard. One thing he likes most about ENVD is the opportunity to make connections with professionals.
- Brooke is from Santa Cruz, California. During her sophomore year, she made the switch from architectural engineering to environmental design. In summer 2017, she interned with the architecture firm Fuse, and in summer 2018 one of her designs broke ground. In her spare time, she listens to podcasts, "because you can learn so much about a subject in 20 minutes."
- Christian is from Fort Collins, Colorado. He works at the Digital Media Center and enjoys urban exploration and photography. One piece of advice he'd give incoming students is "to not hold back, be yourself and go for it."