Cincinnati Enquirer: Loveland-native rocker now working to protect the environment in California

With her band's tour schedule on hold amid pandemic, UC alumna puts urban planning degree to work

When UC grad Kirsten Bladh moved to Los Angeles a couple years ago, she was still a full-on rock and roller, working at a coffee shop there, between tours with her Cincinnati band, Leggy.

She’s now coming out the other end of the pandemic with a new gig, helping to enact environmental policy changes in California.

Bladh graduated from the University of Cincinnati’s College of Design, Architecture, Art, and Planning with a bachelor’s degree in urban planning in 2013. Since then, she'd been performing with successful Cincinnati-based punk band Leggy, touring internationally and recording music. Bladh plays bass alongside vocalist/guitaristVéronique Allaer and Chris Campbell on drums. 

During the pandemic, when live music was put on hold, she landed a job with California consulting firm M-Group. One of her projects was for Petaluma, Calif., on an ordinance banning the construction of new gas stations, becoming the first city in the country to do so.

“I feel like being a musician actually kind of helped me get the job, because they thought that it was really cool, and they kind of liked that I wasn’t jumping right from school into this job, that I had been pursuing another creative field,” Bladh told the Cincinnati Enquirer.

Read the full story at Cincinnati.com.

Related Stories

2

Engineering student studying flight physics of birds

April 24, 2024

After earning a bachelor's degree in mechanical engineering in Nepal, Sameer Pokhrel came to the United States to further his education. From an early age, he had a lifelong fascination with aviation. As an adult, he transformed this fascination into a career, pursuing a doctoral degree in aerospace engineering at the University of Cincinnati's historic program. Here, he has succeeded in research, instruction, and was recently named Graduate Student Engineer of the Month by the College of Engineering and Applied Science.

Debug Query for this