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This episode of Convo By Design is scheduled for the week of July 8th, 2025. Intentionally so we can begin thinking about what’s coming. It’s hard to forget trauma, like what we saw in Pacific Palisades and Altadena earlier this year. But not impossible. Traditionally, “fire season” in California begins in August and ends around the end of October. Over the decades, there has been a creep into July, then June on the front end and then into November and December on the back end. Sadly, now, there is no longer a fire season, only an ongoing threat. Part of a recent California tour that started in the Bay Area and ended in Pasadena, I got an earful, and, because the mics are always on, so will you. In this special episode, you’re going to hear an extraordinary panel conversation in its entirety—one that explores the very real and immediate design challenges and opportunities facing architects, builders, designers, and manufacturers when creating residential projects in fire-prone areas. This conversation was recorded live and it’s one of the most practical, informative, and emotionally resonant discussions we’ve had about fire-resilient design. This was recorded live from Golden State Lumber in Concord, CA. It features amazing professionals from design, landscape design and architecture. We have industry insiders and those on the front lines, literally.
Designer Resources
Pacific Sales Kitchen and Home. Where excellence meets expertise.
Design Hardware – A stunning and vast collection of jewelry for the home!
– Where service meets excellence
TimberTech – Real wood beauty without the upkeep
Today, you are going to hear from;
Caroline Nassif | Studio Ovo
Mary Ann Schicketanz | Studio Schicketanz
Ian Cox | Devlin McNally Construction
Amy Wolff | Ceara Studio
John Davis | John Davis Architect
Robby Myer | Golden State Lumber
Jay Williams | The AZEK Company
Dustin Moore | Strata Landscape Architecture
This episode features the full conversation in four parts and here are some important ideas to listen for:
Setting the Context—Urgency, Evolution, and Mindset Shifts
We open with a candid discussion about the evolving nature of wildfire—how modern firestorms are not the slow-moving ground fires of the past, but fast, intense, and unpredictable events that demand a complete rethinking of how homes are sited, designed, and built.
Materials, Methods, and Design Strategy
This section dives into the specific building systems and material choices that can help defend a home against wildfire.
Design Solutions in Action
This is where we get into real-world case studies. Panelists share examples of how they’ve adapted fire-resilient strategies in current projects and how clients are responding to new realities.
Systems, Bureaucracy, and the Bigger Picture
The final section broadens the lens to policy, forest management, and societal responsibility.
What you’re about to hear is the full conversation—raw, honest, and highly informative. It captures the crossroads where climate, design, policy, and personal responsibility meet. Whether you’re a designer, builder, municipal official, or homeowner, this discussion offers real, actionable insights into how we build safer, smarter, and more beautiful homes for a rapidly changing world.
That was the full conversation on designing and building for fire resilience—an important and timely topic that continues to evolve as our climate, policies, and expectations shift. Thank you to this amazing group; Mary Ann, Amy, Caroline, Jay, Ian, Robby, John and Dustin. I want to thank my partner sponsors who help make this show possible: Pacific Sales Kitchen and Home, a Best Buy Company, TimberTech, The AZEK Company and Design Hardware. Thank you for listening, subscribing, and sharing the show with your colleagues. Your support means everything, and it helps grow this conversation across the design community.
Make sure you subscribe to Convo By Design so you never miss an episode. We have more incredible guests, ideas, and conversations coming your way.
Please keep those emails coming. You can reach me directly at [email protected], and be part of the conversation on Instagram, @ConvoXDesign—that’s Convo X Design.
This is a complex issue and one that requires both deeper thought and immediate action. I want to thank every one of our expert guests for their insights, time, and passion.
Today, we learned:
Huge thanks, as always, to you for joining the conversation and to our sponsors for supporting these meaningful stories.
If you found this episode valuable, share it with a colleague and subscribe to make sure you don’t miss what’s next. We’ll continue bringing you the people, ideas, and innovations pushing the design world forward.
Until next time, stay curious, resilient, focused and rise above the chaos. – CXD
4.8
4040 ratings
This episode of Convo By Design is scheduled for the week of July 8th, 2025. Intentionally so we can begin thinking about what’s coming. It’s hard to forget trauma, like what we saw in Pacific Palisades and Altadena earlier this year. But not impossible. Traditionally, “fire season” in California begins in August and ends around the end of October. Over the decades, there has been a creep into July, then June on the front end and then into November and December on the back end. Sadly, now, there is no longer a fire season, only an ongoing threat. Part of a recent California tour that started in the Bay Area and ended in Pasadena, I got an earful, and, because the mics are always on, so will you. In this special episode, you’re going to hear an extraordinary panel conversation in its entirety—one that explores the very real and immediate design challenges and opportunities facing architects, builders, designers, and manufacturers when creating residential projects in fire-prone areas. This conversation was recorded live and it’s one of the most practical, informative, and emotionally resonant discussions we’ve had about fire-resilient design. This was recorded live from Golden State Lumber in Concord, CA. It features amazing professionals from design, landscape design and architecture. We have industry insiders and those on the front lines, literally.
Designer Resources
Pacific Sales Kitchen and Home. Where excellence meets expertise.
Design Hardware – A stunning and vast collection of jewelry for the home!
– Where service meets excellence
TimberTech – Real wood beauty without the upkeep
Today, you are going to hear from;
Caroline Nassif | Studio Ovo
Mary Ann Schicketanz | Studio Schicketanz
Ian Cox | Devlin McNally Construction
Amy Wolff | Ceara Studio
John Davis | John Davis Architect
Robby Myer | Golden State Lumber
Jay Williams | The AZEK Company
Dustin Moore | Strata Landscape Architecture
This episode features the full conversation in four parts and here are some important ideas to listen for:
Setting the Context—Urgency, Evolution, and Mindset Shifts
We open with a candid discussion about the evolving nature of wildfire—how modern firestorms are not the slow-moving ground fires of the past, but fast, intense, and unpredictable events that demand a complete rethinking of how homes are sited, designed, and built.
Materials, Methods, and Design Strategy
This section dives into the specific building systems and material choices that can help defend a home against wildfire.
Design Solutions in Action
This is where we get into real-world case studies. Panelists share examples of how they’ve adapted fire-resilient strategies in current projects and how clients are responding to new realities.
Systems, Bureaucracy, and the Bigger Picture
The final section broadens the lens to policy, forest management, and societal responsibility.
What you’re about to hear is the full conversation—raw, honest, and highly informative. It captures the crossroads where climate, design, policy, and personal responsibility meet. Whether you’re a designer, builder, municipal official, or homeowner, this discussion offers real, actionable insights into how we build safer, smarter, and more beautiful homes for a rapidly changing world.
That was the full conversation on designing and building for fire resilience—an important and timely topic that continues to evolve as our climate, policies, and expectations shift. Thank you to this amazing group; Mary Ann, Amy, Caroline, Jay, Ian, Robby, John and Dustin. I want to thank my partner sponsors who help make this show possible: Pacific Sales Kitchen and Home, a Best Buy Company, TimberTech, The AZEK Company and Design Hardware. Thank you for listening, subscribing, and sharing the show with your colleagues. Your support means everything, and it helps grow this conversation across the design community.
Make sure you subscribe to Convo By Design so you never miss an episode. We have more incredible guests, ideas, and conversations coming your way.
Please keep those emails coming. You can reach me directly at [email protected], and be part of the conversation on Instagram, @ConvoXDesign—that’s Convo X Design.
This is a complex issue and one that requires both deeper thought and immediate action. I want to thank every one of our expert guests for their insights, time, and passion.
Today, we learned:
Huge thanks, as always, to you for joining the conversation and to our sponsors for supporting these meaningful stories.
If you found this episode valuable, share it with a colleague and subscribe to make sure you don’t miss what’s next. We’ll continue bringing you the people, ideas, and innovations pushing the design world forward.
Until next time, stay curious, resilient, focused and rise above the chaos. – CXD
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