Networks and cities' news

Catch up on the latest updates from cities working together in URBACT Networks. The articles and news that are showcased below are published directly by URBACT’s beneficiaries and do not necessarily reflect the programme’s position.

Want to learn more about the projects that are featured here? Discover the URBACT Networks.

 

 

  • Turning an urban heat island into an ecological and recreational lung

    Salamanca Avenue will have a new green space on its boulevard

     

    Viktoria Soos

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  • A "City Oasis" for Prešov

    An open call to re-imagine an abandoned green area in a key spot of the Slovakian city

    Gregorio Turolla

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  • A "City Oasis" for Prešov

    An open call to re-imagine an abandoned green area in a key spot of the Slovakian city

    Gregorio Turolla

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  • The future of Welcoming International Talents

    Our URBACT project is in the last phase, soon it will be over. However, this should not mean that cities (partners and others) should stop with welcoming internationals. Text by the project lead partner, Jan Kees Kleuver.

    Evite van Winkoop

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  • Designing the neighbourhood of the XXI century, through strategic innovation

    “It could be that the neighbourhood, not the individual, is the essential unit of social change. If you’re trying to improve lives, maybe you have to think about changing many elements of a single neighborhood, in a systematic way, at a steady pace.” – David Brooks

    n.rydlewska

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  • HEALTHY CITIES: Bridging Urban Planning and Health

    WHY IT IS IMPORTANT TO PLAN AND DESIGN OUR CITIES FOR HEALTH

    Almost all urban planning policies and actions have an impact on human health. Do you cycle or drive to work? Do you connect with your community or commute through it? And when you’re feeling stressed, is it easy to go for a calming stroll in a green space? All too often, when people hear health policy, they think hospitals. But health is holistic, with the design of our urban environment feeding into whether and how often populations need those hospitals. Urban planners select locations, design spaces, and place services, and there’s ample scientific evidence to indicate these factors have a big impact on health. ISGLOBAL has identified air pollution, noise, heat, and lack of physical activity or natural space as health hazards presented by city living (see figure 1). Good urban planning, however, can not only mitigate the impact of those hazards, but also become a tool for generating health.

    Marta Rofin-Serra

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