Community stakeholders play a pivotal role in shaping our built environment through their political influence, decisions, actions, and rhetoric. As members of these communities, it's essential to recognize the impact and significance of the choices made on our behalf. By doing so, we can ensure that our shared spaces truly reflect the values, ideals, and narratives of the communities we inhabit. Understanding this dynamic empowers us to actively contribute to the creation of spaces that resonate with who we are and what we stand for.This project uses Burlington Wisconsin as a case study on how stakeholder decisions impact the health and well being of communities and attempts to answer the question “How can I make communities understand the impact of stakeholder’s decisions?” This piece serves as a call to action, exploring the connections between rural ecologies, rural communities, and rural politics.

Through this project I want to call to action community members to think about the connection between stakeholder decisions, health, and built enviornment. This project touches on the deeply interconncected system between health, environment, politics, and money. How do stakeholders decisions effect our health, quality of life, and environmental impact? 
This project attemps to use man made plant islands, to reduce the algae levels on Echo lake (a man made lake), in the shape of the 5 (man made) quarries that circle the city of Burlington, leading to health and environemntal consequences in the area. This project is meant to comment on environments ability to respond to