Challenge
Before the site, important details were scattered across Word documents, email threads, committee files, and organizer messages. Delegates asked the same questions because the answers existed, but not in one dependable place.
A public site for Champlain Valley Model UN that puts schedules, committees, guides, rules, and contact info where delegates can actually find them.
The CVMUN site was built for a real audience: student delegates, advisors, and staff who needed conference information without digging through emails and docs.
Before the site, important details were scattered across Word documents, email threads, committee files, and organizer messages. Delegates asked the same questions because the answers existed, but not in one dependable place.
A centralized, mobile-first conference website. The structure focused on getting people to critical info in three clicks or less: schedules, committee pages, downloadable guides, rules, and contact details.
This was client work in the useful sense: real users, a deadline, and consequences if the navigation was confusing. It sharpened the boring-but-important parts of web design: hierarchy, copy clarity, mobile testing, and organizing information for non-technical people.
A quick demo clip from the original project page, kept inside the same hard-edged terminal frame instead of burying it below the writeup.
Same visual system as the main ToadTech revamp: hard-edged, terminal-ish, and allergic to generic portfolio gloss.