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Monday, 1.07.2024
eGovernment Forschung seit 2001 | eGovernment Research since 2001

The two-year Visible initiative will support city leaders in London, Madrid and Oslo to pilot equitable and viable construction and renovation models.

C40 Cities has announced Visible, a project that seeks to harness the power of cities to decarbonise their built environments in a way that is both just and economically viable.

The two-year project will bring city leaders and officials in London, Madrid and Oslo together with representatives from workers unions, housing providers, construction industry actors, asset managers and finance and development stakeholders to explore how social equity and inclusion can be embedded into an urban decarbonisation journey.

Social value of the built environment

It will reimagine the construction, renovation and operation of buildings in a way that includes and benefits city residents and workers, and considers the social value of the built environment.

According to C40 Cities, the built environment contributes close to 40 per cent of global greenhouse gas emissions and 35 per cent of total waste generation.

The sector is Europe’s largest industrial employer with 15 million people working directly in the supply chain, and a further 33 million migrant workers are estimated to be indirectly employed.

Buildings are symbolic of cities – from the way they look, to the opportunities they offer for prosperity, and the quality of homes and workplaces they provide. Yet residents and workers are currently absent from transition thinking, C40 reports.

C40 plans to bring together building stakeholders to propose new, inclusive and economically viable business models for development, renovation and regeneration, convene multi-stakeholder dialogues, conduct research and support demonstrative pilot projects in each city. This will lay the groundwork for policy measures the three pilot cities may adopt to decarbonise their built environment. C40 will share the project’s outcomes across its global network of cities.

“Project Visible addresses the built environment’s combined crises of climate impact, housing unaffordability and job insecurity in a holistic way that brings to light the multi-faceted opportunities an inclusive transition will bring,” said Kevin Austin, deputy executive director, C40 Cities.

“Over the last five years, C40’s cities have been moving at pace towards net zero, with policy and processes to support the decarbonisation of buildings; but the voice of those who live in and work on our buildings has been absent. We are excited to collaborate with mayors and city leaders from London, Madrid and Oslo to create opportunities for those previously unheard voices from resident and labour rights groups, alongside the more traditionally-recognised industry actors, to jointly chart the way forward.”

C40 reckons the project will help the pilot cities mainstream the delivery of affordable low-carbon housing; mandating measurement of whole lifecycle carbon in new developments; scaling up retrofitting; and reuse of materials – in ways that are both socially equitable and economically viable.

The project will build a robust consensus among stakeholders within each city of how social equity and workers’ rights can be embedded in the sector’s transition. The wider network of C40 city leaders and officials advocating for policy change will be equipped with practical examples of a fairer and lower-carbon sector, one that leaves nobody behind and has the backing of the diversity of stakeholders that will deliver and be impacted by the transition.

“This project is an important moment for the sector to broaden its lens on the future and to understand the way its transition must support and benefit the end users it serves,” said Cristina Gamboa, CEO of the World Green Building Council.

“We will be supporting C40’s work to empower cities to set clear trajectories and enabling conditions for decarbonising the construction industry in areas from procurement to construction, ownership and operation that, importantly, work within market and viability constraints.”

Project Visible is supported by Laudes Foundation. Laudes said it works with partners to inspire and challenge industry to harness its power for good in response to the dual crises of inequality and climate breakdown.

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Quelle/Source: SmartCitiesWorld, 21.11.2023

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