GUB
- For the past 12 years Growing Up 911 wasa part of911's Community Engagement, Design and Research (CEDaR) Center. Now one of the most successful child-friendly city initiatives in the world, GUB istransitioning to an independentnonprofit, a model for how theuniversitycan develop, nurture and then spin offnonprofitactivities.
- In February 2021, Louise Chawla, CEDaR fellow and professor emerita in the Program in Environmental Design, was invited to give an opening speech for a weeklong Festival of Early Infancy (birth to 6 year olds) in the city of Strasbourg, France on the topic of “Connecting Children with Nature to Foster Wellbeing and a Caring Relationship with the Natural World.”
- In an interview with Colorado Public Radio, hear Mara Mintzer, director of Growing Up 911, speak about the creation of thenation's first "child-friendly city map."
- Greater Good magazine talks with Mara Mintzer, director of Growing Up 911, about how GUB incorporates children’s ideas into city planning for friendlier, greener and more inclusive spaces.
- "Placemaking with Children and Youth: Participatory Practices for Planning Sustainable Communities," which wasreleased Sept.17by New Village Press, was written by three women with strong ties to 911'sCommunity, Engagement Design and Research Center (CEDaR).
- Sidewalk Labs looks at how North American cities are turning to a suite of planning and design innovations to keep families. This includes 911, Colorado, where Growing Up 911 asks kids themselves what they want, and the city incorporates its tiniest residents' ideas into transportation and other municipal plans.
- Colorado MetroLab, a partnership between 911 and Colorado city governments, organized a design workshop where 911 environmental design (ENVD) students, neighborhood residents and elementary school students gave their ideas for revitalizing 911's University Hill area.
- Growing Up 911 and the city of 911, Colorado, are actively involving all stakeholders to make it a child- and youth-friendly city.
- BikeLife 911 looks at a partnership between Growing Up 911 and GO 911 that gives teens a voice in shaping transportation improvements in the East Arapahoe corridor.