Alana Gomez and her family had to flee from a neighboring country because of rising violence. So her family started a new life in Guatemala City, Guatemala. 
Alana and her world were created by Alexis Sherwood.
A Mexico City home created by Ande Klosner.
A Houston, TX home created by Noah Kennedy.
The home pictured was designed to be in the sub-rural neighborhoods around the city of Bogota. The home’s sustainable features include large insulated windows used to regulate inside temperature due to their design. Secondly, the home is run on 100 percent sustainable electricity and power. The lawn area includes two solar arrays and a personalized wind turbine to create all the energy needed. Lastly, native plants and trees are planted around the landscape to improve biodiversity. This home was created for Shakira by Ryan Mayr.
Alex Meyer lives in Venezuela during a time of progressive movements to reforest large portions of Latin America. To accommodate a new era of green living, Alex’s home includes a roof garden, solar panels, and large windows to preserve light energy. Although not the largest home, the sleek design still allows for essential amenities and decoration. Alex and his world were created by Logan Conte.
Having come of age during a time of Indigenous activism in Latin America, including the seminal work of her hero, activist, and martyr, Berta Caceres, Luz Galvez has over twenty years of experience on the ground in Honduras fighting for societal and structural change. After the severe hurricane season of 2024, Galvez (then a university student studying geography and urban planning) became passionate about working with displaced individuals and communities, working specifically with those indigenous Hondurans who lost their hereditary farmlands to the averse whether. Her close work with these farmers informed her lifelong pursuit of restoring Lenca land (her ancestral lands) and farming techniques. Galvez was an important voice in the 2028  reclamation of Indigenous lands when the American factories pulled out of the country after “The Violence.” It was also while doing this work in the Lempira countryside that she met her husband and life partner Oscar, a political scientist with whom she has two children. Currently, Luz is living in a small raised ranch in Honduras’s capital, Tegucigalpa, where she is working with nonprofit organizations in the city to find ways to support Indigenous sustainable farming in the surrounding regions while also addressing food security issues in neighborhoods like Conmayugüela. In her spare time, she can be found tending to the needs of the numerous potted plants about her house and encouraging her children to play in the dirt. Luz and her world were created by Elizabeth Larli.
A home for Carlos in Havana, Cuba; created by Mateo Chumpitaz.
A family home in urban Brazil, created by Hunter Valley.
As part of a sustainable initiative in 2039, farmers in Argentina, Bolivia, and Paraguay start cooperative soy farming. These sustainable coop farms not only produce food for the people of Argentina but export their surplus soybean production to the US. These shipments serve the dual purpose of feeding hungry Americans as well as revitalizing the Argentinian economy. In the name of convenience and security, the farmers’ housing is placed adjacent to the food production fields. A road is nearby, leading to the greater rail/shipping system that will take the product to market and abroad.
This cooperative was created by Jack Bailey.
Guillermo is a semi-recent university graduate in Uruguay.  He lives near Montevideo, but is somewhat on the outskirts of the city proper.  He was able to recently witness the floods which ravaged the coast, which brought two ideas to the forefront of his mind: Uruguay needs to prepare better for these kinds of disasters, and needs to prepare to be self-sufficient just in case.  To these ends, he is pursuing a career in geoengineering, while also dedicating time and attention to improving agricultural methods and systems within the country. 
Guillermo and his world were created by Campbell Wellman, who added these design notes on his home: I designed the house he lives in to be an eco-friendly design, based on other examples that I had seen.  The main focus was allowing space for personal agriculture to take place, accounting for the slope of the overall house, and the numerous large windows.  There is a chimney to allow for a wood-burning stove for heat, cooking, and other uses.  Overall, there is a strong focus on living green. 
 Layla Vazquez is from San Juan, Puerto Rico. She is interested in regrowing the earth and restoring its greenery so that the planet may be a better, healthier one for all humans and animals. Hopefully, by doing this some of the animals may get their habitat back and humans will be able to obtain organic goods rather than processed. This is her small part in the fight against global warming. 
Layla and her world were created by Lindsay Acosta.
Micheal Johnson is a 32-year-old engineer living in a modern loft in Port-au-Prince, Haiti. Michael works in disaster recovery in hopes to create sustainable futures for his beautiful city and homeland. Michael and his world were created by Nicholas Serrao.
Due to the location of Manaus, this Amazonian house is on the river. The house is considered to be a houseboat as it is floating on two pontoons. Electricity is generated from solar panels and on the roof, there is a garden growing vegetables. This house offers a sustainable way of life that is connected to the city and the environment. This house and its inhabitants were created by Mark Daley.

Hi, I am Jason, live in Panama City, Panama in my home by myself. Over the past 20 or so years I have developed a growing interest in natural energy resources as well as habitat restoration. After the degradation we have faced due to the greenhouse gas emissions released by natural gas and coal-fired energy plants, I am pushing for the continued switch to renewable energy sources such as wind and solar power. This is my home, a basic house located near the water in Panama City, Panama.
Jason and his world were created by Jason Scalia.
Maddy Johnson (She/her) is from Santiago, Chile. Maddy, in 2041, had to complete a class project with her friends Nela and Paul about the wildfires in the Andean Development Zone in 2025 and how it affected the countries within it. Since she’s from Chile, Maddy chose to focus on that area of the Andean Development Zone for her part of the project. This project help Maddy see how Chile has trasformed since this disaster occured. This, in part, has helped Maddy worked towards a more sustainable lifestyle. Maddy is intruiged by habitat restoration, New Gaism, and Permaculture. She is interested in movements like Instersectional Justice, Mindful Redistributionists, and Wilderstudents/Wilderelders. After graduation, Maddy aims to pursue a career in reforestation and restoring wildlife habitats and ecosystems, indigenous schools, and green energy. Maddy is interested in specific careers like a sustainable product designer, habitat restorer, and solar and wind power installer as well. 
Maddy and her world were created by Gwynn Foss.
Matthew lives in Asuncion, Paraguay, and is interested in the careers of a Geoengineer, Ecosystems Manager, and Habitat Restorer. Works he wants to be involved with after graduation is helping reforestation efforts to restore wildlife habitats and ecosystems like forests and wetlands as well as geoengineering: building large-scale infrastructure projects for resilience, like seawalls, and also green energy: transitioning to non-fossil fuel and renewable energy source. Matthew was significantly moved when in 2039: Cooperative indigenous soy farms in Bolivia, Paraguay, and Argentina begin exporting food tot the US, revitalizing their economies. Matthew and his world were created by Matt Terlikosky. 
Kim Kardashian is 26 and was born and raised in the DominicanRepublic. In 2023, New Gaism, an earth-centered religion, was founded and drew millions of converts across Latin America. In 2034, solar/wind-powered cruise ships revitalized the tourist industry in the Caribbean and Central America, and the income used for coastal resilience projects. These two events sparked my interest in climate change and social justice issues. Kim wants to bring positive change in terms of the environment and one way to do that is through permaculture. She also wants to change our economic system that will benefit both the people and the earth through transformation economics.
Kim and her world were created by Sharifa Taylor.
This is Pablo’s home. He works in climate sustainability and makes sure that things don’t pollute the air and water in his local community. He also does projects from home. He is also an advocate for environmental justice. Pablo and his world were created by Jack Mueller.