Meet Heather Henriksen, director of the Harvard Office for Sustainability

Harvard’s chief sustainability officer on scaling up green solutions while scaling back its environmental footprint

Photograph by Stu Rosner

“This might be a little in the weeds, but trust me, it’s cool.” Heather Henriksen is warming up an impassioned (but definitely cool) oration about a University-wide push to get harmful chemicals—“flame retardants, antimicrobials, stain repellents, water repellents”—out of campus buildings. “I’m a bit obsessed with this.” It’s her job to be: Henriksen directs the Office for Sustainability, a post she took in 2008, a few months after the office formed as a successor to the Harvard Green Campus Initiative. Among her tasks: shepherding into existence Harvard’s five-year Sustainability Plan, a wide-ranging “road map” for enhancing well-being and reducing the University’s overall environmental footprint by 2020. The campus, she says, is “an excellent test bed” for solutions: “If we can pilot and prove it here, we can scale it” to the world beyond. “That’s the real goal.” A child of northern California, Henriksen grew up hiking, biking, and volunteering for beach cleanups. “I was the kid who was reading the Berkeley Wellness letter.” She interned one summer with Save the Bay, removing mercury pollution from the San Francisco Bay—and would discover 10 years later that her own mercury levels had skyrocketed from eating fish. “That’s when I said, ‘OK, this environmental work isn’t casual anymore.’” Before coming to Harvard as a Kennedy School student (she’s M.P.A. ’08), she worked for five years in business development for Time Warner in New York; she spent her off-hours two blocks away at the National Resources Defense Council, listening, learning, working. These days Henriksen spends her nights with her two-year-old daughter, Liv, whose name means “life” in Danish. “She reminds me why we’re doing all this.”

Read more articles by Lydialyle Gibson
Related topics

You might also like

Landscape Architect Julie Bargmann Transforming Forgotten Urban Sites

Julie Bargmann and her D.I.R.T. Studio give new life to abandoned mines, car plants, and more.

Preserving the History of Jim Crow Era Safe Havens

Architectural historian Catherine Zipf is building a database of Green Book sites.  

Your Guide to Summer 2025 Along Boston Harbor

Enjoying Boston Harbor’s Renaissance this summer

Most popular

Why Men Are Falling Behind in Education, Employment, and Health

Can new approaches to education address a growing gender gap?

The 1884 Cannibalism-at-Sea Case That Still Has Harvard Talking

The Queen v. Dudley and Stephens changed the course of legal history. Here’s why it’s been fodder for countless classroom debates.

Explore More From Current Issue

Four young people sitting around a table playing a card game, with a chalkboard in the background.

On Weekends, These Harvard Math Professors Teach the Smaller Set

At Cambridge Math Circle, faculty and alumni share puzzles, riddles, and joy.

Lawrence H. Summers, looking serious while speaking at a podium with a microphone.

Harvard in the News

Grade inflation, Epstein files fallout, University database breach 

A bald man in a black shirt with two book covers beside him, one titled "The Magicians" and the other "The Bright Sword."

Novelist Lev Grossman on Why Fantasy Isn’t About Escapism

The Magicians author discusses his influences, from Harvard to King Arthur to Tolkien.