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ULI SPRING MEETING ULI SPRING MEETING
REGISTER
Colorado Convention Center, Denver, CO, United States May 12-14, 2025
Panelist

Ms. Gabrielle Bullock

Principal, Director of Global Diversity Perkins&Will

Gabrielle Bullock, FAIA, NOMAC, IIDA, LEED AP Principal and Chief Diversity Officer Gabrielle oversees Perkins&Will's Justice, Equity, Diversity, and Inclusion (J.E.D.I.) program, which works to support and strengthen a firmwide culture that embraces a diversity of people, colors, creeds, credos, talents, thoughts, and ideas. Her unique role as an award-winning principal and the firm's Chief Diversity Officer enables her to combine her passion for architecture and social justice to effect positive change at a micro and macro level. Gabrielle is regularly sought out around the world for her leadership and expertise in issues of social equity in architecture. Gabrielle has been a key player in Perkins&Will's success for over three decades. She's worked in both the New York and Los Angeles offices and became the first African American and first woman to rise to the position of Managing Director in the firm. Over the course of her career, she has led numerous complex and high-profile projects, most recently Destination Crenshaw, a project that combines all the elements that Gabrielle believes makes for a successful groundbreaking project. Gabrielle graduated in 1984 from the Rhode Island School of Design with degrees in fine arts and architecture, becoming the second African American woman in history to earn an architecture degree from that university. In 2014, she was elected by her peers as a Fellow of the American Institute of Architects (AIA) and served on the AIA's Equity in Architecture Commission. She is a Council member of the National Organization of Minority Architects (NOMA) and trustee of the Rhode Island School of Design. She has served on the boards of the Girl Scouts of Greater Los Angeles, International Interior Design Association (IIDA), the USC Architecture Guild, and the Center for Architecture and Urban Design Los Angeles. She served as the 2018-2019 President of the International Interior Design Association (IIDA). Gabrielle is the recipient of the 2020 AIA Whitney Young Jr award, the 2022 AIA Los Angeles Gold Medal, the 2019 AIA Los Angeles Robert Kennard, FAIA Award for Equity, Diversity and Inclusivity, the 2022 IIDA Star Award and the 2023 Inaugural Paul R. Williams, FAIA "The One Who Dares" Award for her commitment to advancing diversity and social impact in the architecture profession.

Speaking at

Mon May 12 2:30 PM — 3:30 PM (GMT-07:00) Mountain Time

Transformative Urban Corridors: Equitable Revitalization of Communities in Three Cities

Leaders transforming major urban corridors through equitable transit-oriented development (TOD) share the perspectives of three cities. These communities—each with a unique story tied to race, place, and transportation—are implementing groundbreaking projects and revitalizing the physical landscape and social and economic fabric within historically marginalized populations. Los Angeles's Destination Crenshaw introduces light rail transit (LRT) into "the spine of Los Angeles's Black community," a 1.3-mile stretch of Crenshaw Boulevard being revitalized into "an unapologetically Black" thriving cultural and commercial hub. Baton Rouge's Florida Corridor, a 12-mile Department of Transportation right of way that has symbolized racial division as the "Mason-Dixon Line of the city/parish," has approved a revitalization plan centering on equity and access, alongside new bus rapid transit (BRT) and the MOVEBR infrastructure investments. Denver's East and East Central Colfax and Federal Boulevard Corridors—with monikers "the longest, wickedest street in America" and "one of the most dangerous streets in the city," respectively—are transforming into BRT Equitable TOD corridors with prioritization on safety and community benefit.