These are also all ways that we hope people come to engage with a queer cabin in the woods that many lovingly call “The Cantú.” After all, tree houses are where young people go to reimagine worlds, rebuild concepts of family, escape, find safety, dream, and learn through play. Indeed, we do like to celebrate the tree-house nature of this beautiful space. House/Cabin shape: Many who visit the Cantú center up near Crown & Merrill colleges, remark at the warm, cozy cabin and tree-house-like feel of the physical building.Redwood Trees: A gesture to UCSC’s stunning campus, and particularly to the Redwood trees that surround and nestle the wood cabin that the Cantú has called home since 1997.It has since been adopted by the larger LGBTQ community as a popular symbol of LGBTQ pride and the LGBTQ rights movement. In the 1970s, it was revived as a symbol of protest against homophobia and grew more popular throughout the 1980s and late 90s as HIV and AIDS activist groups like “Act Up” often displayed the symbol at protests. In Nazi Germany in the 1930s and 1940s, it began as one of the Nazi concentration camp badges, distinguishing those imprisoned because they had been identified by authorities as homosexual men, a category that also included bisexual men and transgender women. Pink Triangle: The pink triangle has been a symbol for various LGBTQ identities, initially intended as a badge of shame, but later reclaimed as a positive symbol of self-identity.The logo features key design elements that tell stories about the center, UCSC’s campus and LGBTQIA+ history: The Lionel Cantú Queer Resource Center logo was designed by a UCSC alumnus in 2016.