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.

 

 

  • Surfing the Wave of Digitalisation

    How to tackle digital exclusion at local level

    It is well known that water and electronics don’t mix. So why are we talking about surfing and digital in the same sentence? Surely that sounds like a bad idea..?!

    Ride the wave with me for a few minutes and I will explain…

    Over the last 2.5 years, the Digi-inclusion network, a group of nine cities and other authorities and agencies, have been working to answer the question of how we tackle the digital divide at local level. One of the most important things to come from this network, was a new way of looking at the digital divide at local level. This starts with the concept of “The Wave of Digitalisation”. 

    “What is that and how does it help the digital divide?” you might ask. It’s a good question. 

    Ian Graham

    See more
  • Pula: Turning a Closed Place into an Open Future

    C4TALENT concludes in Pula.


    Zoltán Szenes

    See more
  • Alytus: From Concept to Commitment

    C4TALENT concludes in Alytus.


    Zoltán Szenes

    See more
  • One Health 4 Cities turned a concept into a city-making transformation approach

    “When you see the city through the One Health lens, it is difficult to unsee it.”

    When the One Health 4 Cities network was established, the concept of One Health for cities held different meanings across Europe.

    In Lyon, the Lead Partner, the vision was already clear: cities needed to move beyond reacting to health and environmental crises and start planning preventively, using One Health as a framework that connects human health, animal health, plant health and environmental health. What Lyon lacked were concrete urban case studies, tools and tested ways to embed One Health into strategies, policies, and projects.

    Across the rest of the network, Munich, the Eurometropolis of Strasbourg, Benissa, Loulé, Kuopio, Lahti, Suceava, and Elefsina, the starting points varied widely. Some cities were already working on health, nature, or climate, but far from combining all the One Health domains. Others were encountering One Health for the first time, trying to understand how a concept often used in global health or veterinary science could apply to urban development, urban planning, school programmes, active ageing and other city priorities.

    Departments were siloed. Languages differed. Expectations were uneven. And progress, at first, was slow. Now, almost three years later, One Health is no longer an abstract idea for these cities. It has become a shared planning lens, a common language, and most importantly, a practical way to design healthier, more resilient cities.

    Sofia Aivalioti

    See more
  • Biodivercity Final Article: Welcome to our city’s new Biodiversity Office!

    You intend to transform a part of your common courtyard into a biodiversity hotspot, but your neighbours do not support this idea, even though they do not spend much time in the garden and hate sweeping the leaves in autumn. Yes, they prefer manicured mown and think that nature is always “there”. How to convince them that a nature-inclusive garden is also beautiful, and not neglected, but acts as a habitat.

    Ferenc Szigeti-Böröcz

    See more
  • Machico

    A paradigm shift in progress: the importance of local actions for mobility in Machico, by Tânia Carvalho

    Monica Carrera

    See more