European cities are facing major social and environmental challenges from global geopolitical, economic, and climate changes. Urban areas are particularly vulnerable to these events due to the concentration of people and facilities, and the conventional approach to urban planning which often fail to address the needs of local communities, resulting in solutions that are not socially acceptable and lack a necessary return on investment.
The URBREATH project's main objective is to tackle this issue by developing, implementing, demonstrating, validating, and replicating a comprehensive methodology for urban revitalization, resilience, and climate neutrality. This new approach centers on community participation and the use of Nature-Based Solutions (NBS), supported by advanced technologies like Local Digital Twins and Artificial Intelligence (AI). The goal is to radically enhance social interactions, inclusion, equitability, and liveability in cities.
The project's pathway to impact is a multi-phase process designed to drive systemic transformation in urban areas. This is achieved by combining different research streams and methods into an overarching framework that integrates new processes and technologies with a "more-than-human" perspective.This process is tested in four Front-Runner Cities (Cluj-Napoca, Leuven, Madrid, and Tallinn) and replicated in five Follower Cities (Aarhus, Athens, Kajaani, Parma, and Pilsen).