From Burn to Bloom: Redesigning Resilience at the Edge
A Micro-Symposium on Fire, Land, and Whole-System Design
Date and time
Location
La Cañada Flintridge Country Club
5500 Godbey Drive La Cañada Flintridge, CA 91011Good to know
Highlights
- 5 hours 30 minutes
- In person
Refund Policy
About this event
Why This Event
La Cañada Flintridge, and the surrounding foothill communities, sit at the very edge of the San Gabriel Mountains, squarely in the Wildland-Urban Interface (AKA the Ecotone). Here we live with fire risk, drought, and extreme conditions. This also means we live, work and play at an edge where collaboration with Nature is of the utmost importance.
This half-day symposium brings together homeowners, architects, designers, policymakers, and community members for an urgent and inspiring exploration of resilience. Through personal stories, lived experience, and grounded ecological strategies, we will reimagine our homes and neighborhoods not as fragile places to defend, but as whole ecosystems that can heal, protect, and thrive.
What You’ll Experience
🌿 Learn from fire survivors and regenerative designers who turned preparation into resilience.
🌿 Challenge outdated narratives of “defensible space” and “fuel modification” that separate us from Nature.
🌿 Explore whole-system practices: water harvesting, soil-building, plant guilds, microclimate creation, and more.
🌿 Hear from experts on proposed Zone 0 policies, trees, soil remediation, and ecosystems as allies in fire and drought resilience.
🌿 Connect with neighbors, land stewards, and leaders who want to design a regenerative future together.
Agenda
- From Burn to Bloom: Redesigning Resilience Through Whole-System Thinking – Shawn Maestretti & Leigh Adams
- Zone 0 and the Importance of Tree Canopy: Rethinking Risk & Resilience – Stephanie Landregan
- Living on the Edge: Ready-to-Burn Communities & Ecotone Design – Shawn Maestretti
- Soil Preparation & Remediation as Fire Strategy – Leigh Adams & Lynn Fang
- Panel Discussion: Designing the Next Chapter Together – Led by Pamela Dreyfuss
- Lunch & Networking – with an optional tour of the native putting green garden
Why Attend?
This is not about fireproofing. It’s about relational preparation…with land, with each other, and with the living systems that sustain us.
You’ll leave with:
✅ Practical strategies to protect your home and community
✅ New ways of thinking about risk, resilience, and renewal
✅ A deeper sense of connection to the land we live on
✅ Inspiration to act, collaborate, and reimagine what thriving looks like here, together
Tickets
GA (General Admission) - Early Bird: Guests Impacted by Recent Fire $ 5.00
GA (General Admission) - Early Bird: General Public $15.00
GA (General Admission) - After 10/25: Guests Impacted by Recent Fires $10.00
GA (General Admission) - After 10/25: General Public After 10/25: $25.00
Speakers & Hosts
Shawn Maestretti | Landscape Architect, Founder of Studio Petrichor, and Co-Founder of Poly/Ana
Leigh Adams | Artist, Landscape Designer at Studio Petrichor, and Co-Founder Poly/Ana
Photography by: Stella Kalinina
Leigh Adams and Shawn Maestretti are regenerative landscape advocates and educators. Together, they founded Poly/Ana, a non-profit organization that invites communities to build relationships with land through hands-on workshops that educate people about ecological literacy, fire resilience, and poetic restoration.
Poly/Ana's talks and workshops are as soulful as they are practical—braiding systems thinking, ancestral memory, and design justice into every conversation. Both Leigh and Shawn have lived through wildfire loss, and both chose to stay, listen to the soil, and begin again.
Their partnership blends feminine and masculine approaches, professional design, community healing, technical fluency, and story-driven insight. Whether they’re walking through a garden, leading a workshop, or holding space for policy conversations, Leigh and Shawn offer more than knowledge—they guide people into deeper connection with land, memory, and belonging. Their offerings restore not only soil, but our sense of relationship to place, each other, and to what endures.
Learn more at www.thepolyana.org.
Lynn Fang, MS | Soil scientist working at the intersection of community composting, regenerative farming, and habitat restoration.
Lynn Fang, MS is a community soil scientist with over a decade of experience in ecological design, composting, soil health testing and research, and community education. Since the fire, she has focused on supporting families with soil contaminant testing and bioremediation. She brings an integrated, ecological, and community-oriented approach to soil health. Through the use of nature's toolbox of minerals, microbes, and plants, healing the land is possible.
Stephanie Landregan, MsPM, FASLA | Director of Altadena Green, Landscape Architect
Stephanie Landregan, MsPM, FASLA is a Landscape Architect and Director of Altadena Green. For 17 years Stephanie Landregan, FASLA, was the Director of the Landscape Architecture and Horticulture Programs at UCLA Extension. Her areas of teaching include natural systems design, green infrastructure storm water design, community facilitation, water conservation design and installation, and pollinator design. Previously as the Chief Landscape Architect for the Mountains Recreation and Conservation Authority, Stephanie worked for nine years in the Wildlife Urban Interface (WUI) in Los Angeles and Ventura counties.
In February 2025 she supported the Blue-Ribbon Commission on Fire-Safety Recovery initiated by Los Angeles County Supervisor Lindsey Horvath and UCLA Chancellor Julio Frenk. In June of this year, Stephanie became the Director of Altadena Green, a grassroots organization of volunteer landscape professionals who have deep connections to the community and have coordinated efforts to preserve trees and share resources for residents as they embark on the process of bringing Altadena back to life. Stephanie is one of two So California Directors with the California Council of ASLA.
Ms. Landregan is a registered licensed landscape architect in the State of California, 4093 and a LEED Accredited Professional BD+C. She holds a Bachelor of Art from the University of Kentucky in 3-Dimensional Design, and a Master of Science in Project Management from UW Platteville.
Learn more at www.altadenagreen.org.
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