By acknowledging the role of landscape practice within Brenner and Schmid’s theory of ‘extended urbanization’, the project posits that today’s climate catastrophe cannot simply be addressed through traditional market-led forces in the urban arena. The epoch of the Anthropocene is an urgent signal for designers to shift away designing within settings of excessive consumption (cities) and instead regions embedded within, and shaped by, landscapes of production and extraction - areas often remote, deliberately out of sight, and subsequently excluded in the today’s hegemonic architectural agenda towards high-density and ‘sustainable’ city living. Equitable climate action through design should not only address the reimagination of cities but also its hinterlands, where structurally declining remote communities reliant on intensive agricultural and mining economies, are becoming increasingly vulnerable to volatile market conditions and worsening climatic events. By employing cartographic and computational methodolo