A recent New York Times article chronicled how Elmhurst Hospital in Queens was besieged by Covid-19 patients, while nearby hospitals had capacity[1]. The article referenced an earlier tragedy on September …
toward the costs of an initiative to help Community Development Financial Institutions and investors identify and evaluate projects that have high resilience potential in an effort to improve the economic and climate resilience of vulnerable communities in the U.S.
for use by its Global Resilient Cities Network toward the costs of establishing an independent organization to sustain the 100 Resilient Cities Network
in support of the participation of Chief Resilience Officers from cities around the world at the Resilient Cities Network Convening to be held in New York, New York, November 2019
for use by its Adrienne Arsht-Rockefeller Foundation Resilience Center in support of identifying, implementing, and scaling solutions to the urgent crises of climate change, migration, and security
Mobilizing capital and driving investment at scale into solutions that can reduce emissions dramatically and protect the most vulnerable from climate impacts.
for use by 100 Resilient Cities in support of expanding and enriching the Global Resilience Academy curriculum and institutionalizing its approach (in partnership with Columbia University’s Graduate School of Architecture, Planning, and Preservation)
for use by 100 Resilient Cities toward the costs of building cities’ capacity globally to maintain and recover critical functions in the face of shocks and stresses, and to support their progress toward operational independence and sustainability