

🌍 BuildMove: How to Build a Movement and Create Legacy with David Gottfried
​Tetra Tech is proud to host David Gottfried | Founder, USGBC & WorldGBC, Creator of Regen360, Senior Advisor to Blue Planet Systems
​In this dynamic Earth Day keynote, David Gottfried shares the powerful personal and professional blueprint behind some of the world’s most impactful sustainability movements—from founding the U.S. and World Green Building Councils to launching Regen360, a regenerative digital platform for industry transformation.
​Rooted in 30 years of global leadership and soul work, David introduces his 7-Step BuildMove™ Framework—a practical and soulful guide for anyone ready to build a movement that lasts. Through storytelling, case studies, and visionary slides, he unpacks the DNA of movement-building:
​• The ignition of why
​• Defining your core values and “Value Rings”
​• Identifying the tipping point of culture
​• Designing for scale and system change
​• Cultivating legacy through regenerative economics
​Audiences will be inspired by David’s call to action: that each of us holds the power to build not just companies, but cultures. Not just projects, but platforms. And not just careers, but legacy.
​The keynote will be followed by a brief fireside chat moderated by Emily M. Olson, Sustainability Director at Tetra Tech. She will be joined by Paul Quickert, Expert in Supply Chain Responsibility at Pacific Gas and Electric Company, Dalton Ho, Senior Regenerative Design Advisor at Perkins & Will, and Brian Stern, Director of Energy at Glumac. They will discuss how their current programs are contributing to movements towards a net-zero, regenerative future.
​By registering for this event, you agree to share your registration information with the organizers of SF Climate Week.
​Also, Join David Thursday, April 24 in Pittsburgh, CA to learn more about Blue Planet’s breakthrough carbon management technology and experience a live demonstration of their mineralization process, where they create carbon-sequestered and upcycled RCA aggregates that help lower the embodied carbon of concrete into the negative. Details here: Blue Planet: Plant Tour · Luma