State and Local Mechanisms of Design Leadership
Explore three distinct models of community design leadership—from civic design centers to state-led and academic partnerships—and learn how volunteer-driven approaches can meaningfully impact communities.

About the live course
AIA was a critical partner to the early Community Design Centers in the late 1960s and early 1970s. Today, there are dozens of community design centers across the country. The Civic Design Center represents one important model that emerged out of local advocacy efforts and has gone on to have a profound impact on the future of Nashville. The Minnesota Design Team embodies a Component-led model at the state level. Established in 1983, the MDT has served over 100 communities across the state, leveraging the contributions of hundreds of volunteer professionals. The University of Massachusetts Amherst’s Center for Resilient Metro-Regions has partnered with Communities by Design in recent years to deliver technical assistance to 9 towns in Vermont and Massachusetts, offering another model. This session will explore comparative approaches to design leadership and volunteer mobilization to impact communities.
- Understand the community design center model for design leadership and its dramatic impact on the city of Nashville through the Civic Design Center.
- Learn about the Component-led design assistance model and the impact that the Minnesota Design Team has had across the state.
- Learn how innovative university-led design assistance partnerships can be utilized to impact small communities through the experience of the University of Massachusetts Amherst partnership with Communities by Design.
- Gain an understanding for how to adapt these models to their own communities to affect change and catalyze design leadership.
Presented in partnership with Communities by Design (CxD).


