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Dr.
Dennis Reinhardt
Storyteller, Ecological Solution
Advisor and Public Relations
[email protected]
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Spanning nearly four decades, Dennis began his career with
an eclectic mix of naturalist, mountaineer, explorer, student,
and nature photographer. Early geospatial experiences launched
him firmly into the dynamic and awakening disciplines of ecology
and systems modeling. In his early career he became ecologist,
teacher, aerial photographer, and interdisciplinary
student of geography and its technological successor
- geographic information systems (GIS). He
saw the complementarity between Earth sciences and emergent
developments in remote sensing, and he pursued applications
derived from whole systems approaches as the underlying theoretical
framework for all ecological and environmental sciences. Toward
the close of his formal graduate education in the mid-seventies,
he emerged by choice from the limits and constraints of traditional
science and proceeded to build an alliance with the leading
American practitioners in regional ecological planning, landscape
architecture, and environmental design first as a PhD
candidate enmeshed in the real world as administrator of several
pioneer foundation and NSF funded environmental programs at
UC Davis and Berkeley, then as a
member of the core faculty of the Graduate School
of Design at Harvard, and a decade later, at the
Center for Remote Sensing at Boston University.
From these academic posts, he devised methodologies for
integrating ecological theory and complex systems methodologies
into the solution of design and planning challenges he encountered
as Senior Ecologist at Sasaki Associates,
as owner of Cambridge Solar Enterprises,
and as Senior Scientist at Earth Satellite Corporation.
In these varied professional roles, he was able to infuse
"real world" issues into the classroom as case studies and
in solution focused research and professional practice. Since
the mid-nineties, first at Risk Management Solutions
and more recently at Sand Hill Enterprises
Dennis has continued his involvement in planet restoration
by laying the groundwork for reversing the destructive policies
that adversely affect ecological landscapes and the human
environment. Dennis founded Sand Hill Enterprises in 2000,
to provide satellite imagery for risk and disaster response,
but also to support mitigation design, environmental monitoring
and assessment, archaeology, and ecological planning. His
most recent explorations have been to bring Ian McHarg's regional
scale environmental planning approaches into the framework
of the technology of twenty-first century GIS. In addition
to his involvement with Sand Hill Enterprises, in which he
assists environmentally based companies in funding their endeavors,
Dennis has become affiliated with Green Fuse Energy
Company LLC as Chief Ecology and GIS Officer, where
he engages complex geospatial concepts at the institutional
scale. He has also recently become the ecological solutions
advisor to oneVillage Foundation in a major initiative to
introduce ICT (information communications technology) into
Africa to facilitate solutions to the AIDS crisis.
Raised on a California vineyard, where the daily influences
of nature combined with the nurturing voices of mentors and
sometime heroes with names like Carson, Meadows, Hessmeyer,
Leopold, Unsoeld, Hadsell, Teilhard de Chardin, Brower, Churchman,
Treichel, Marsh, Johnson, Adams, Wilson, Dasmann, Sears, and
McHarg; these "companions" in life and literature "sang" an
accompaniment to a thousand books. Signposts pointing to an
inclusive and integrated Nature-Spiritual-Humanist philosophy
that has become an eclectic tapestry defining his goals and
recent initiatives have marked his life. Dennis was one of
the first of the now abundant "chroniclers" of Aldo
Leopold and the land ethic, and was a member of the
forward looking team of forest ecologists that lit the match
for the first "prescribed burn" in Yosemite in the early sixties;
he was a local organizer and speaker on the First
Earth Day, and he conducted the first workshops leading
to institutionalization of the now ubiquitous environmental
impact statements as the "red flags" of the National
Environmental Policy Act of 1969. As President of
the Oregon State Mountain Club in 1973, his biggest disappointment
was that as a standby member of the Everest West Ridge Expedition,
and not a member of the summit teams of Unsoeld, Hornbein,
Whittaker, Gombu, Bishop, and Jerstad, he did not reach the
summit of Everest.
However, during the winters of the early to mid-seventies,
he climbed all of the major volcanic peaks of the Oregon Cascades,
and stood atop St. Helens several years before the mountain
exploded in a cataclysmic demonstration of the dynamic power
of earth processes. During the summers, he was the naturalist
at Emerald Bay and DL Bliss State Parks at Lake Tahoe, where
he repeatedly called for the cessation of road building in
the remote areas of the National Forests and where he was
the first to identify both the presence of inversion smog
at South Lake Tahoe as well as investigate the link between
Lake basin development and eutrophication of its pristine
waters. Dennis was an ecologist before the word had entered
the popular lexicon. During the decade before the launch of
the first Landsat satellite, he recognized the importance
of viewing the Earth from space, and as pilot of
his Cessna 172, he personally acquired one
of the largest private collections of aerial images of California
a collection now destined for Harvard. He also piloted
his University extension students on numerous interpretive
missions over the San Francisco Bay Region as the "field trip"
for his popular extension course, 'Ecology of the
Land an aerial perspective'.
Dennis is also one of only a few individuals outside of Russia
with access to the sub-meter global satellite archives of
the Russian Defense Ministry.
Now entering the next phase of a career that has been quietly
rewarding, he is committed to assisting in a successful launch
of Green Fuse Energy, a company that is being
built on the holistic philosophy of Ian McHarg,
in his landmark book, "Design with Nature",
and on the hope filled insights of E O Wilson,
expressed in his newest book, "The Future of Life".
As he heads down the home stretch, Dennis intends to spend
much of his time writing on various subjects, but all in one
way or another focusing on the future of humanity.
Dennis resides in Palo Alto, California, with his wife,
Geraldine, archaeologist and independent scholar specializing
in the cultures of Central Asia and the former Soviet Union.
His Daughter, Katrinka resides in Berkeley, and is a geologist/archaeologist
specializing in Chinese Bronze Age cultures. She currently
is a PhD candidate at Stanford University, working a dissertation
on stratification in the Shang period at the ancient site
of Anyang. As a family, Katrinka, Geraldine, and Dennis have
participated in archaeological reconnaissance together in
Egypt, Yucatan, Morocco, Kenya, and Tanzania, as well as traveling
to India in connection with his assignment to establish remote
sensing capabilities at the RMS subsidiary in New Delhi.
Contact:
Dennis Reinhardt
PO Box 7192
Menlo Park, CA 94026
Cell:650-799-3234
[email protected]
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