TSS holds a variety of networking, idea sharing and learning forums which contribute to both:

Supporting our sustainability leaders within the built environment community, and

Engaging with the wider built environment practitioner network to highlight sustainability issues and build the capacities to respond

We work in collaboration with other aligned networks and organisations to create the ‘joined-up’ thinking that is required for the future.

Thursday 26 October 2023 I Te Whanganui-a-Tara/Wellington

Sustainaganza 2023 is a one day forum for innovators and changemakers working to shape our future cities and communities.

We are facing a myriad of complex challenges across Aotearoa and this forum will bring together leaders working in different disciplines right across the spectrum of urban development to explore and experiment with how to tackle these wicked problems in bold and collaborative ways.


Sustainability Research Symposiums

The Sustainability Society is initiating a regular forum to provide a platform for researchers who are exploring sustainability in relation to aspects of our built environment. We want to support an ongoing dialogue between researchers and practitioners who share a focus and expertise in sustainability.

Our next online forum will be held soon and we are currently inviting any researchers whose work intersects with an aspect of sustainability across the built environment to get in touch with us – sarah@sustainabilitysociety.org.nz.


Waterwalks

We hosted our third series of waterwalks around the country in 2022.

These walks are intended to reconnect the local community and built environment practitioners with a local waterway and provide different stories about it’s history, present and potential futures.

These were held in Auckland, Wellington and Nelson with the help of some of our talented water network in those centres. For the first time in 2022 they were hosted online so that they didn’t need to be postponed due to our changing COVID conditions and therefore we are excited that these recordings can continue to be a resource for people who want to learn more about some of our urban waterways across Aotearoa.

Watch the recordings from these waterwalks here

Please get in touch if you are interested in hosting a waterwalk in your region to explore then history and story of our urban waterways across Aotearoa.

Thanks to our organisational members Tonkin & Taylor and Morphum Environmental for partnering with us to present these waterwalks.


Climate Change Foundations Webinar Series

TSS, in partnership with Engineering NZ, hosted a three part webinar series in late 2021 focussed on foundational knowledge of climate mitigation and adaptation (both physical and transitional).

The recordings of these sessions are available on our vimeo channel here


Green Drinks Auckland and Wellington

We are excited to get back into hosting our Green Drinks across the country in 2023 (our seventh year hosting this monthly event)

What is ‘low-fi’ Green Drinks? It’s people with a connection to sustainability getting together for a regular catch up. Simple really. We just want to offer a little incubator for ideas and connections. 

Sign up to receive updates and register for our Green Drinks follow us on Eventbrite


TSS Webinar Series 

We had a hugely successful webinar series in 2021 despite the challenges of COVID and had some very generative sessions that addressed a wide range of sustainability issues and opportunities across Aotearoa’s built environment including:

Te Mana o te Wai – Shaping our Future Work Watch recording of the session here   

RMA reform in Aotearoa and it could form a new approach  – Watch recording of the session here 

Urban Ecology and the Role of nature in our Future CitiesWatch recording of the session here  

Circularity and Doughnut Economics and it’s application in the Built Environment Watch recording here

Developing Communities of Practice around Rapid Urban Transformation recording coming soon

 


Webinar Series – Mobility Through a Water Quality Lens 

There is no question that urban roads and the level of vehicle traffic they carry affects water quality in receiving environments. It has been estimated that 10% of all microplastics in the oceans are derived from tyre wear, and sediments, heavy metals and hydrocarbons are washed into our streams and rivers every time it rains. The question needs to be asked, what would our future transport networks look like if we placed improving water quality outcomes as the primary driver?

The Sustainability Society hosted a series of three webinar panels in February 2021 to investigate this question.