V. Kelly Turner

Associate Director and Professor of Urban Planning and Geography

Kelly Turner (she/her) is an associate professor of urban planning and geography and serves as associate director of the Luskin Center for Innovation. She leads the Center’s research on heat, which provides evidence-based approaches to protect people, especially vulnerable populations, where they live and work.

Dr. Turner’s current research encompasses heat governance and policy, planning for resilient communities, and producing actionable data for heat health. Her work has been published in Nature, Environmental Research Letters, and the Journal of the American Planning Association and funded by the National Science Foundation, the Robert Wood Johnson Foundation, and the Strategic Growth Council of California. She has served as a panelist for the National Academy of Sciences and as a Science Advisor to the Arsht-Rockefeller Extreme Heat Resilience Alliance.

Dr. Turner prioritizes science communication to broad audiences. She is a co-author of the Luskin Center for Innovation’s Heat Policy Brief Series and regularly advises local and state officials on heat policy. She is an Association of American Geographers Elevate the Discipline Climate and Society Communications Fellow. She regularly appears on television, radio, and print media, including CNN, NPR, and NBC. She has published an OpEd in the LA Times and produced several murals with local artists using Cool Paint.

She received a doctoral degree in geography from the School of Geographical Sciences and Urban Planning at Arizona State University and a bachelor’s degree in Political Science from Wellesley College.

CURRENT PROJECT(S)

Empowering people to stay outside when it’s hot

Shade is the most effective way to cool people. Our national Shade Map, created in collaboration with American Forests, empowers communities to identify shade gaps and target investments in trees and shade infrastructure. Our researchers are analyzing the shade data for 15 communities across the U.S.

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Researcher(s): V. Kelly Turner, Lana Zimmerman, and Jean Claude Iradukunda
Funder: Robert Wood Johnson Foundation

The increasing impacts of extreme heat on health are intensified for children. However, schools lack effective solutions. Designed in collaboration with schools, the HeatReady Schools Southwest Regional Resilience Innovation Incubator will create school-level solutions for heat-prone regions, expand heat illness prevention and response training, promote greater awareness and action to reduce heat illness, promote safe activity, improve learning, and align with school heat resilience programs and policies.

Researcher(s): V. Kelly Turner and Lana Zimmerman
Funder: National Science Foundation

As evaluators of the California Governor’s Office of Land Use and Climate Innovation’s Extreme Heat and Community Resilience, our experts are assessing project successes and barriers as well as examining cooling strategies implemented in California and internationally.

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Researcher(s): V. Kelly Turner, C.J. Gabbe, Lana Zimmerman, Camille Burrus, Zachary Wampler
Funder: California Governor’s Office of Land Use and Climate Innovation

The Eastern Coachella Valley Shade Equity Master Plan will provide a roadmap for the unincorporated communities of Mecca, North Shore, Oasis, and Thermal to invest in new shade infrastructure and adapt to extreme heat. The plan will recommend where and how to create more shade based on input from residents, government, and other key stakeholders, as well as a detailed analysis of needs and opportunities. The Luskin Center for Innovation is working with Kounkuey Design Initiative to identify policy pathways and actionable strategies for increasing shade in these areas.

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Researcher(s): V. Kelly Turner, Lana Zimmerman, Zachary Wampler, and Jean Claude Iradukunda
Funder: California Governor's Office of Land Use and Climate Innovation

We are providing a menu of feasible strategies to support the California State Legislature’s ability to facilitate the adoption of mechanical cooling, such as air conditioning, in homes and schools. We are focusing on home and schools because these are two settings where populations most sensitive to heat—infants, youth, seniors, and those with medical issues—spend the most time. This project is informed by engagement with California legislators, agency staff, nonprofit leaders, and heat legislation research across the country.

Researcher(s): V. Kelly Turner and Lana Zimmerman
Funder: Resources Legacy Fund

We are collaborating with the frontline communities of Eastern Coachella Valley, Ontario, Pacoima in the Northeast San Fernando Valley of LA, and Watts in South LA on outcome-based research on those who are most vulnerable to the impacts of climate change. The goal is to empower communities to implement cooling solutions for bus stops and other streetscapes, facilitate the increased use of transit and active transportation, and reduce pollution while creating climate-resilient neighborhoods.

Researcher(s): V. Kelly Turner and Ariane Middel
Funder: California Strategic Growth Council

This first-of-its-kind study aims to answer: How did communities of color get disproportionately burdened by extreme heat? In a case study of Watts, Los Angeles — a historically Black neighborhood where temperatures are 4.7°F hotter than the city average — the team is examining how the neighborhood’s microclimate has changed over time to pinpoint what discriminatory interventions contributed to the present-day heat burden.

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Researcher(s): V. Kelly Turner, Mark Vestal, and Bharat Venkat
Funder: UCLA Transdisciplinary Research Acceleration Grant

Communities everywhere are grappling with ways to become more resilient to climate change, which means planning for multiple hazards and factoring in social causes and consequences. UCLA is leading efforts to understand how hotter conditions affect the health and well-being of disadvantaged groups in Corpus Christi, Texas.

Researcher(s): V. Kelly Turner
Funder: National Academy of Sciences via Texas A&M University

In partnership with the LA Regional Collaborative for Climate Action and Sustainability (LARC), Luskin Center for Innovation researchers are helping implement the California Communities Extreme Heat Scoring System (CalHeatScore), a pilot heat ranking system (legislated through AB 2233) that uses public health data on emergency room visits (building on a system created by David Eisenman called UCLA Heat Maps).

Uniquely, the tool links conventional temperature-based heat warning system thresholds to the likelihood of harm. The Luskin Center for Innovation is 1) analyzing and reporting leading heat alert practices from around the world to the state, and 2) supporting LARC in end-user engagement to improve tool implementation.

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Researcher(s): Erin Coutts, V. Kelly Turner, Colleen Callahan, Camille Burrus
Funder: California Office of Land Use and Climate Innovation

In partnership with the UCLA Institute for Environment and Sustainability, the Luskin Center for Innovation is extending our shade equity planning work in Los Angeles and integrating cell phone mobility data to understand where and when people are exposed to heat. We can then overlay other information, such as temperature and shade maps, to better inform decision-making to mitigate heat hazards.

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Researcher(s): Travis Longcore, V. Kelly Turner, Jean Claude Iradukunda, and Sahar Derakhshan
Funder: California Office of Emergency Services and the Federal Emergency Management Agency

Our researchers, in partnership with Arizona State University and the University of Arizona, established the nation’s first Center of Excellence for Heat Resilient Communities. The Center engaged and supported communities in determining the best strategies for local heat mitigation and management while developing public and private investment recommendations. Despite a loss of federal funding, our researchers will serve as senior advisors to the Atlantic Council’s Climate Resilience Center’s continued work with the 15 previously recruited communities.

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Researcher(s): PI V. Kelly Turner (Luskin Center for Innovation), CoPI Sara Meerow (Arizona State University); CoPI Ladd Keith (University of Arizona); Senior Project Manager Trace Lane (Luskin Center for Innovation); and Program Coordinator Zachary Wampler (Luskin Center for Innovation)
Funder: The National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration originally supported this project.

RECENT NEWS

New toolkit helps communities prepare for heat

New toolkit helps communities prepare for heat

Blueprint for a better planet

How Luskin Center for Innovation and other parts of UCLA are advancing a healthier, more sustainable future.

The Top Bruinvention of the 21st Century (So Far)

Our national Shade Map