Kendall Square

Optimism Around Building A Sustainable Future, In Kendall and Beyond

There was optimism in the air at Kendall Square Association’s 14th Annual Meeting Celebration: [Re] Imagining a Sustainable Future.  For the first time in three years, we gathered, in person, with more than 200 members of our innovation ecosystem to celebrate our community’s success and to look forward to new and emerging technologies which will lead to a more sustainable future for all of us. 

Thanks to the support of sponsors Alexandria Real Estate, the Broad Institute of Harvard and MIT, the Broad Discovery Center, Biogen, BioMed Realty, CIC, Draper, MIT, MITIMCO, and Siena Construction, we enjoyed refreshments from some of Kendall’s beloved local restaurants and retailers, including Catalyst, Lamplighter, Mamaleh’s and Cambridge Spirits at the MIT Welcome Center while members of the Kendall Square Orchestra provided joyful music.

The MIT Welcome Center hosted a networking reception for 200+ KSA members.

From the Welcome Center, we strolled across to the exciting new MIT Museum where KSA’s new Executive Director, Beth O’Neill Maloney, welcomed everyone–KSA Board members, elected officials including City Councilors Patricia Nolan, Marc McGovern, and Paul Toner, and guests from around Kendall Square and beyond. Cambridge Mayor Sumbul Siddiqui shared a video message thanking the Kendall community for all it’s doing to advance sustainability locally and globally.  She said “events like this, where we’re sharing resources, knowledge, and expertise, exemplify exactly how the City of Cambridge is going to tackle its climate issues—collaboratively and at the forefront of our world’s sustainability efforts.” 

Scenes from the networking reception at the MIT Welcome Center.

KSA Board Chair and Broad Institute Chief Communications Officer Lee McGuire facilitated a thoughtful conversation about the future of sustainability with leaders, Emily Knight, Chief Operations Officer at The Engine, Stuart Brown, Chief Financial Officer at Inari Agriculture, and Joe Higgins, Vice President for Campus Services and Stewardship at MIT

Each panelist made clear that the talent and technology being developed and harnessed in Kendall could solve the global, existential climate change crisis we face. 

The U.S. power grid is critical for advancing sustainability goals.

In Kendall Square we are committed to using our talent and technology to solve the world’s greatest sustainability challenges in ways that are profound, peer-driven, and long-lasting. Stuart Brown, who moved to Kendall from the financial district, described feeling the difference in the energy here. That difference comes from being united in our efforts to improve the human condition. The innovations happening here are worthy of investment, encouragement, and pride. The future lives here.  

Read the full transcript here. Special thanks to KSA’s Kendra Foley who led the planning for this special event, plus KSA teammates Caleb Hurst-Hiller, B. Kimmerman, Abigail Phillips, Adriana Rios, and Yuqi Wang.

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