Sasaki’s winning design will create an accessible, activated waterfront and establish a protected shoreline for wildlife to flourish
Community Engagement
Sasaki is a national leader in meaningful, creative engagement that reaches broad, diverse constituents. We believe community and stakeholder input is a critical component of our work and leads to better plans and designs. Our engagement processes are known for blending fun, engaging activities with accessible information, and for asking meaningful questions through a variety of media to uncover community priorities. We place a particular focus on engaging traditionally hard-to-reach populations to ensure recommendations reflect diverse visions of success.
A dynamic landscape that breaks the static sea wall boundary, improves accessibility and engagement, and provides protection from sea level rise
A re-envisioned large neighborhood park and regional destination arises out of robust engagement with the whole Baton Rouge community
The premiere public amenity of Baton Rouge, LA, long deprived of social, economic, and natural activity, is being revitalized into an ecologically sound, cultural inclusive, and safe place
Virtual Reality offers Boston an interactive vision of the new Boston City Hall Plaza, gives clients insight into new arts and dining facilities
Recasting the "vision plan" as a storytelling exercise to get community members of all ages and backgrounds invested in the future of Denver's High Line Canal
Sasaki project team gathers community feedback as they develop a plan for the future of the Fort Point neighborhood
Sasaki designers Breeze Outlaw, Diana Fernandez-Bibeau, Sasaki alum Melissa Isidor, and the Frederick Douglass Sculpture Committee hosted an engaging community meeting to envision the future of the Frederick Douglass Sculpture Plaza
Sasaki heads to the Equality State to speak with University of Wyoming community members as planning begins
The jewel of Alabama's state park system, ravaged by hurricanes and oil spills, bounces back as a model of green building and economic sustainability
Where flooding is a way of life, planning and designing to welcome water is a natural next step for this Chinese riverfront park