Barcelona
Spain
Spain
Green Blue Grey Solutions for Adapting to Climate Change
Barcelona is a compact city of 1.6 million inhabitants with a hot and humid climate. In the warm period of the year, the city is exposed to an excessive heat burden that is expected to increase in the following years due to the increased frequency, duration, and intensity of heatwaves as a result of climate change.
The GBG_AS2C project promoted an innovative adaptation plan in support of climate resilience through the conversion of schoolyards to cool islands (termed Climate Shelters) with a mix of blue (incorporation of water points of different types in the courtyards), green (more shadow spaces and greenery in the courtyards), and grey (interventions on the buildings and use of permeable materials) measures.
The project is implemented in the context of Barcelona’s Climate Plan, which promotes the transformation of communal spaces as a climate change tackling strategy. The project applied a participatory process for co-designing along with the educational community, the interventions per Climate Shelter. The spatial environmental, climatic, urban, and social characteristics of Barcelona were accounted accordingly.
The project developed a new green sector in the shape of Climate-friendly urban planning. It also has a strong pillar on urban health, by means of reducing the concentrations of air pollutants and improving thermal comfort both indoors and outdoors. To this end, it considerably supports city resilience to climate extremes.
The implementation of the project was affected by covid-19 restrictions taken that it is strongly related to the school system. Difficulties related to the need for multiple procurement processes for its technical interventions part. A governance system enabling inter-municipal cooperation was established, leading to the effective implementation of the project’s work packages, including the on-time completion of the technical interventions.
The output of the project so far, is a network of 30 Climate Shelters dispersed all over the city, a fact that demonstrates its strong upscaling potential and is considered a strong asset for climate resilience to increased air temperatures and heatwaves. Finally, a thorough monitoring and evaluation plan has been developed in support of the assessment of the performance of solutions and interventions.
Partnership
- Barcelona City Council
- Public Health Agency of Barcelona - sectoral agency
- Barcelona Consortium of Education
- Barcelona Cycle of Water - Public Service Provider
- Barcelona Institute for Global Health - Higher Education and Research Institute
- Institute for Environmental Science and Technology UAB - Higher Education and Research Institute
- Vila Olimpica School
Barcelona is a compact city of 1.6 million inhabitants with a hot and humid climate. In the warm period of the year, the city is exposed to an excessive heat burden that is expected to increase in the following years due to the increased frequency, duration, and intensity of heatwaves as a result of climate change.
The GBG_AS2C project promoted an innovative adaptation plan in support of climate resilience through the conversion of schoolyards to cool islands (termed Climate Shelters) with a mix of blue (incorporation of water points of different types in the courtyards), green (more shadow spaces and greenery in the courtyards), and grey (interventions on the buildings and use of permeable materials) measures.
The project is implemented in the context of Barcelona’s Climate Plan, which promotes the transformation of communal spaces as a climate change tackling strategy. The project applied a participatory process for co-designing along with the educational community, the interventions per Climate Shelter. The spatial environmental, climatic, urban, and social characteristics of Barcelona were accounted accordingly.
The project developed a new green sector in the shape of Climate-friendly urban planning. It also has a strong pillar on urban health, by means of reducing the concentrations of air pollutants and improving thermal comfort both indoors and outdoors. To this end, it considerably supports city resilience to climate extremes.
The implementation of the project was affected by covid-19 restrictions taken that it is strongly related to the school system. Difficulties related to the need for multiple procurement processes for its technical interventions part. A governance system enabling inter-municipal cooperation was established, leading to the effective implementation of the project’s work packages, including the on-time completion of the technical interventions.
The output of the project so far, is a network of 30 Climate Shelters dispersed all over the city, a fact that demonstrates its strong upscaling potential and is considered a strong asset for climate resilience to increased air temperatures and heatwaves. Finally, a thorough monitoring and evaluation plan has been developed in support of the assessment of the performance of solutions and interventions.
Partnership
- Barcelona City Council
- Public Health Agency of Barcelona - sectoral agency
- Barcelona Consortium of Education
- Barcelona Cycle of Water - Public Service Provider
- Barcelona Institute for Global Health - Higher Education and Research Institute
- Institute for Environmental Science and Technology UAB - Higher Education and Research Institute
- Vila Olimpica School
This is a case study as part of an UIA report. You can access all of the project's resources on its project collection page.
About this resource
#SCEWC24 treasure hunt:
Reach the next level --> explore this page and find the button "Climate Adaptation", hidden in the "Green" part.
Then, you have to find an "Urban practice" located in Paris.
The Urban Innovative Actions (UIA) is a European Union initiative that provided funding to urban areas across Europe to test new and unproven solutions to urban challenges. The initiative had a total ERDF budget of €372 million for 2014-2020.
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