Templates
Government & Public
Emergency Management Government
Hearth - Sovereign Community Emergency Management Landing Page Template
Hearth is a hub-and-spoke emergency management landing page designed for tribal emergency management authorities. It mobilizes sovereign communities from personal preparedness to collective coordination using cause-and-effect storytelling, inline resource access, and a primary alert signup flow. Built for mobile-first use on spotty connections, it serves elders, families, caregivers, and volunteer crews with equal clarity.
by Rocket studio
Hearth is a single-page emergency resource hub designed for tribal emergency management authorities. It walks community members from household readiness to coordinated public response using scenario-driven storytelling and amber-highlighted calls to action. The page is built to work on small screens with limited connectivity, so every resource reaches the people who need it most.
This template is designed for sovereign tribal nations that need a community-facing emergency management presence. It serves the full range of people involved in emergency preparedness and response at the tribal level.
Emergency information is often scattered across documents, state agency portals, and outdated notices. For individuals with limited connectivity or language barriers, that fragmentation can cost lives. Tribal emergency management programs need a single hub that is ready before disaster strikes.
Hearth provides a complete set of page sections, design assets, and interactive components designed to inform, protect, and mobilize a tribal community. The layout prioritizes immediate actionability and user trust, so visitors can act without hesitation.




Theme
Community Hearth
Creative direction
Movement & Cause
Color system
Alpine Fresh
Direction
Content/Resource
Page Sections
Anchor Navigation Hub and Spoke Layout
Cause-and-effect Scenario Storytelling
Primary Alert Signup with Language Selector
Inline Maps and Open-access Checklists
Volunteer and Family Plan Conversion Paths
Alpine Fresh Visual Identity with Amber Action Layer
Can this template support multiple tribal languages?
Does the template include emergency kit and evacuation content?
How does the alert signup work on mobile?
Can the page display real-time emergency status updates?
Is this template customizable to fit a specific tribal community?
Hearth packages every component a tribal emergency management authority needs to prepare, inform, and mobilize its community.
The page is designed around a central anchor navigation bar that smooth-scrolls to six dedicated resource spokes. Each spoke covers one emergency discipline: evacuation, kits, shelter, hazards, volunteering, and alert registration. Visitors can jump directly to the information they need without scrolling through unrelated content.
Each spoke opens with a short real-scenario paragraph, such as the moment a wildfire jumps a highway, before presenting the resource that scenario demands. This storytelling structure helps individuals understand why each resource matters and moves the reader from personal preparedness toward community-wide responsibility.
The emergency alert signup form appears in the hero and repeats as a sticky bar after the visitor scrolls past the second spoke. The form includes a phone number field, a community name or zip code dropdown, and a language selector that supports English and tribal language options, so every household can receive alerts in a familiar language.
Hazard maps load inline on the page, and emergency kit checklists are visible without a download gate. This open-access approach lets families and caregivers review critical information immediately. Resource management tools, including supply lists for a home emergency kit covering food, water, prescriptions, and medical necessities, are presented clearly before any signup request.
Two secondary conversion paths sit alongside the primary alert signup. "Download Your Family Emergency Plan" offers a printable, email-gated guide. "Volunteer With Your Chapter" links to a short intake form where community members can pre-register skills or equipment useful during a response.
The design is built on a four-color Alpine Fresh system: deep evergreen for backgrounds, snow-melt white for content panels, river-stone gray for body text, and high-visibility amber reserved exclusively for buttons, alert badges, and anchor navigation highlights. Amber never decorates; it only appears where action is required.
| Section | Purpose |
|---|---|
| Hero Icon Grid | Establish authority and capture alert signups |
| Anchor Navigation Bar | Enable fast, direct spoke access |
| Evacuation Routes Spoke | Present route and assembly point information |
| Emergency Kits Spoke | Provide supply list and kit guidance |
| Shelter Locations Spoke | Display shelter and warming center details |
| Hazard Maps Spoke | Show localized hazard zone maps inline |
| Volunteer Sign-Up Spoke | Connect members to chapter intake form |
| Alert Registration Repeat | Reinforce signup with sticky bar prompt |
| Family Plan Download | Gate printable emergency plan with email |
| Footer Directory | Provide quick-access emergency service links |
The visual identity follows a Community Hearth theme that feels functional, warm, and authoritative. The header uses a structured icon grid of hand-drawn-style symbols representing each emergency discipline, set above a slab serif authority name and a sovereignty tagline.
The template is designed mobile-first because many community members access emergency information on phones with limited bandwidth and spotty cell service. Every layout decision reflects that context.
The page earns the alert signup by giving resources freely first. Visitors receive real value before they are asked for anything, which makes the primary call to action feel like a natural next step.
This template can support the development, implementation, and maintenance of a tribal emergency preparedness program. It is designed to be culturally appropriate for sovereign communities and can be tailored to reflect local hazards, languages, and geographic assets.