Hawai’i County, HI
Vibrant Hawai’i collaborated with Hawai’i County to design a stationary, long-term monitoring project that leveraged a network of community resilience hubs. The Museum of Life and Science assisted with training and technical support. The project will help communities understand how heat is changing daily life on the Big Island.
New Orleans, LA
Hollygrove-Dixon Neighborhood Association and New Orleans Green Infrastructure Collective worked with CAPA Strategies to design a Heat Watch campaign that would expand and update a 2020 heat map for New Orleans to include updated methodologies and an adjusted map area. The data will be used to inform future advocacy on urban tree planting and nature-based solutions in New Orleans.
Erie County, NY
By bringing together staff from the Erie County Sustainability Office, faculty from the University at Buffalo, and the Delavan-Grider Community Center, the Erie County campaign was able to recruit volunteers, leverage Sustainability Office interns and resources, and draw on the expertise of academic faculty with experience in community-engaged research.
Missoula, MT
Building on their previous informational campaign, “Stay Cool Missoula,” staff from Missoula County, City of Missoula, and Climate Smart Missoula conducted the first-ever Heat Watch campaign in Montana in August 2025.
San German, PR
Caribbean Regenerative Community Development Corporation (CRCD) led a highly participatory, community-led, and engaging Heat Watch campaign in southwestern Puerto Rico. By combining heat mapping data with mobile and stationary air quality data, the CRCD team hopes to inform future tree planting campaigns.
Memphis, TN
The Works, Inc. collaborated with staff from the City of Memphis and Shelby County and faculty from the University of Memphis to conduct a Heat Watch campaign to study extreme heat in Memphis in 2025. One goal of this campaign is to better understand how heat may contribute to extreme differences in life expectancy in different parts of Memphis.

