
The Heritage Project
A new three-week summer intensive for high school students
Duration of Program: July 7-25, 2025
Application Deadline: May 2, 2025
Share the Heritage Project with your students! Download a printable PDF flyer →
The Heritage Project is the Los Angeles Conservancy’s newest student program. This summer intensive may have only lasted three weeks, but its impact will last a lifetime for the program’s students.
Over three weeks and numerous field trips to historic places and workshops, students learned about those who discovered, embodied, and preserved California’s natural and cultural resources—gaining a deeper understanding of what heritage means and what it takes to protect it.
Students heard under-told stories from various communities and learned skills to research historic events and figures, including their personal history. They’ll walk away with a greater appreciation for local, historic, and natural spaces and why preserving them matters.
The Heritage Project, launched in 2023 and is open to students in grades 9-12. To qualify, students must be registered or entering an accredited high school in 91Ö±²¥County for the following fall. There is no participation cost, and students receive a $500.00 education award, to cover the cost of expenses associated with the program and to use for future education endeavors. The education award will be given on the last day of the program. Starting March 24, 2025, the 91Ö±²¥Conservancy will be accepting applications. The deadline to submit your application will be May 2, 2025.Â
If there’s a high schooler in your life that you think would be interested in participating, please help spread the word!
The Heritage Project is supported, in part, by the Los Angeles County Board of Supervisors through the Department of Arts and Culture, Society of Architectural Historians’ American Architecture and Field Trip Program, Getty Foundation, U.S. Bank Foundation Community Possible Grant,Ìý²¹²Ô»å Libby Motika, and Curtis & Jill Scheetz.
Major funding for the Los Angeles Conservancy’s educational programs is provided by the LaFetra Foundation and the Kenneth T. and Eileen L. Norris Foundation.
