Explore how to develop green and thriving neighbourhoods in your city with an integrated vision, a set of design strategies, and a step-by-step delivery roadmap.
By emphasizing the importance of local context, design, and integration, this course will inspire you to think differently about neighbourhoods and provide the necessary tools to take action.
As urban life becomes the default human experience, it is crucial that national and local governments develop resilient and carbon-neutral cities where everybody thrives. To tackle this challenge, inclusive and coordinated policies, strategies and actions are required. Through a more holistic, systems-based approach, cities can achieve multiple environmental benefits and reduce infrastructure costs.
However, integrated planning at city scale can feel like an impossible task, both from a resource and operational point of view. The neighbourhood scale is an ideal entry point for cities to start implementing people-centered, holistic urban design strategies.
Targeted at urban decision-makers and planners, this course describes how to design a “green” neighbourhood layout that positively influences the microclimate and minimizes energy use, while promoting nature-based solutions, circular economy, local sourcing, and smart systems. The course also encourages early community engagement to help urban practitioners better understand people’s needs, motivations, and concerns and ensure that the neighbourhood becomes a place where everybody thrives.
This course aims to provide cities with integrated strategies to transform neighbourhoods across multiple sectors (such as land use, street design, housing, transport, economic development, water, waste, sanitation, public safety, education, and energy) and align multiple actors to have an enduring impact for all communities.
Create an integrated model for neighbourhood regeneration and new developments, contextualised to your community.
Implement low-carbon and people-centred design at neighbourhood level for delivering sustainability, liveability, and better well-being and environmental outcomes.
Acquire greater knowledge on actionable policy, process instruments, and financing tools to oversee the sustainable and integrated design of green and thriving neighbourhoods.
Integrate sustainability dimensions with quality urban design by better understanding the key methods that aim to achieve these strategies, and through a diversity of options and experiences from around the world.
Targeted at urban decision-makers and planners, this course describes how to design a “green” neighbourhood layout that positively influences the microclimate and minimizes energy use while promoting nature-based solutions, circular economy, local sourcing, and smart systems. The course also encourages early community engagement to help urban practitioners better understand people’s needs and motivations and ensure that the neighbourhood becomes a place where everybody thrives.
8 hours
English (French, Spanish, Portuguese, Indonesian Bahasa and Mandarin Chinese available soon)
Personalized certificate provided upon course completion
Neighbourhoods are not merely a collection of statistics or buildings; rather, they depend on the interaction between people, the environment, and architecture. Placemaking is bound to the creation of public spaces and streets as places for people, defined by the interplay of the built environment and voids. The section presents the transformative change potential of place-based actions, explaining how design decisions regarding public space, location, movement, connections, and biodiversity shape green and thriving neighbourhoods.
Parallel actions on urban planning, sustainable design, infrastructure and cross-sector efficiency are required for a transition towards low-carbon and socially just cities. This section provides guidance on the organization of systems to make a neighbourhood resource–efficient, minimizing emissions and counteracting any residual emissions in a robust and transparent way.
Good neighbourhood design, either place-based or system-based, can positively influence the health of people in the community, provide economic opportunities for all, and ensure the safety of women and vulnerable communities. This section provides guidance on how holistic design can address cross-cutting issues such as community health, gender equity, and socio-economic vulnerabilities.
Successfully developing a green and thriving neighbourhood requires a strategic and holistic approach; investing in standalone technical solutions is not enough. This section outlines a development roadmap for implementing placemaking, systems integration and socio-economic strategies in five core stages.