Fulmer grew up in Durham, North Carolina, and her appreciation of the environment came from some unique sources.
"My parents are basically hippies," she said. "When I was growing up I had to open the window blinds in my room at just the right angle to let the sun in. And if I didn't do it right, I would get grounded. Not exaggerating.
"I always was so frustrated that doing the right environmental thing felt like such a challenge. In my career, I realized that sustainability in buildings had to be easy for people."
That challenge led to her studying architecture at Virginia Tech, and she completed her master's degree in sustainable design at the University of Texas.
Like too many women with designs of advancement, though, Fulmer was told, "No."
Stone had similar bumps along her path, saying she often was mistaken for someone serving coffee rather than leading the meeting, even with 25 years of experience overseeing green initiatives for the Miami Heat and two at Chase Center, the home of the Golden State Warriors in San Francisco. She then returned to the Heat as executive vice president, human capital and special projects. Heat president Pat Riley, a Hall of Fame NBA coach, helped her learn best practices for dealing with roadblocks that might be in her path.
"I've had the micro-aggressions," she said. "I've had people take my ideas. But you have a choice in that moment to either let it really set you back and knock you off track or just to continue and just keep going at it and prove over time what you bring to the table, because sometimes it just takes some people longer than others to understand."