My projects across two semesters at Iceland's volcanic landscapes form an interconnected exploration of resilience—ecological at Laki Lava Field and cultural at Heimaey. Both located along Iceland’s dynamic Mid-Atlantic Ridge, these adjacent sites share geological and ecological contexts but emphasize distinct, complementary dimensions of resilience. At Laki (Semester 1), I proposed proactive ecological interventions such as underground refugia, geothermal nurseries, and soil factories, designed to accelerate landscape recovery following volcanic disturbances. At Heimaey (Semester 2), inspired by community narratives from the 1973 Eldfell eruption, I extended this ecological groundwork into a deeper cultural practice of multi-species solidarity. Through sensory-rich interventions grounded in Icelandic folklore, phenomenology, and the concept "Design with Ghosts," I fostered empathy and coexistence, embedding ecological resilience within cultural memory and everyday experience. Together, these projects demonstrate how landscape architecture can nurture both ecological restoration and profound cultural solidarity, shaping adaptive futures in volcanic territories.