Tag Archives: EUI

Did you know you could find THIS in a park?

When it is hot, you might need to balance the need to be outside with the danger and discomfort of heat. Sometimes, parks are no exception to it: either they don’t have enough shadow and cooling spots, or these shadows cannot be comfortably used.

That’s why, to maximise the cooling potential of six parks and create new cooling solutions during heatwaves, the EUI Time2Adapt project has experimented with temporary urban furniture. What’s new about it? That’s what we’re going to see!

1. A user-generated solution

First and foremost, for five out of the six parks, actual and potential users of the areas geared the process. SEED NGO reached out to them via a cargo bike parked at community events (such as a music school’s opening). Through a series of workshops, they also:

  1. Concerted with residents to identify the way they use or not the park, and what they would like to see happen there;
  2. Co-designed the urban furniture based on their initial spatialisation and first shapes; and,
  3. Co-constructed the furniture, after political approval of the sketches.

Experience showed that the cargo bikes worked when users were already present and had time to give their opinion, for example during an existing event, or during a Sunday morning market rather than a Saturday morning one. Workshops were better organised when they took place with local NGOs acting as intermediaries (such as a social centre or a youth prevention club). Being as concrete as possible enabled the participants to project themselves and to own the project.

Co-construction of the furniture at Park of Maison Folie Moulins, spring 2024 © SEED

2. Frame your action well!

After the first experimentation in the park of Maison Folie Moulins in spring 2024, the project acknowledged it was crucial to work upstream with municipalities to validate the technical specifications and political guidelines. For example, electrical networks could limit the installation on a given spot, some places could be prone to antisocial behaviour leading to the need to keep side laneways visible for patrolling services, local projects might already be planned (renovation or participatory budget projects), or, political representatives also have their own priorities and visions that must be taken into account from the outset.

Based on these and on joint meetings, SEED committed itself to co-produce the urban furniture within an agreed frame with restricted contestation possibilities for the municipalities: this approach helped manage residents’ expectations — avoiding situations where community proposals might later be rejected due to missing technical or contextual information.

3. So, eventually, what can you find in these parks?

First of all, new urban furniture was built in places where cooling spaces already existed. The use of shadows provided by trees was maximised with the installation of benches and laying areas in Jardin des Olieux, a meeting space with benches and tables at the Pelouse des enfants du Paradis, a pergola and seats at the Park of Maison Folie Moulins, and a circular bench in Jardin du Palais des Beaux-arts, all in Lille. A “snail bench” was also built in Jardins Clémenceau in Loos.

In terms of new furniture in places with no cooling spaces, resting areas with shade sails were created : benches in Jardin des Olieux in Lille and kiosks in Parc Danel in Loos.

Time2Adapt’s experimental urban furniture, summer 2024 and 2025 © Time2Adapt

4. How can you know it exists?

Now, a main issue is to put these spaces in residents’ mental map for when the weather is too hot indoors, as the neighbourhoods targeted by the project suffer from small and poorly isolated dwellings. Beyond the furniture which is visible thanks to its location on passing areas, the project has also worked on the signposting, to make the other spaces more visible:  an invitation to enter was for example posted on the walls of Jardins Clémenceau or on the way to the Arsenal Park – in which no furniture was experimented. It was already noted, though, that some furniture like the kiosks of Parc Danel, might need more promotion as they are hidden from the main paths.

Signposting towards Jardins Clémenceau and Arsenal Park © François Lescaux and © Ophélie Tainguy

5. Now that they know this, will residents change their habits?

Residents and visitors love using these new spaces. Evaluation is still ongoing, but at this stage every time the project team passes by this new furniture, it is occupied.

On the one hand, some of the furniture is intact – showing the respect and appreciation of the residents. On the other, there have been some deteriorations (wild barbeques, broken curtains): to a certain extent, this means they are used as well. On the contrary, some users of the snail bench have complained about some pigeon’s manure which needed to be cleaned: it shows its success!

As for the new shadows created by the sails in Jardin des Olieux, residents wish they had been more of them!

Last but not least, people have been impressed to see the pace at which their inputs were taken into account, and the fact that the furniture was being installed within weeks and not within months to which they used.

6. It’s only the beginning!

The furniture installed within Time2Adapt is temporary and experimental: it will last as long as it is intact and/or until further plans are being developed. This experimentation is meant to support municipalities in redesigning their cool areas with a long-term prospect. For example, renovation is already planned at the Pelouse des enfants du Paradis : the furniture might be redirected to another green space which is part of the Time2Adapt’s experimentations, the Jardin de la Pouponnière. A participatory budget project will also be implemented in Jardin des Olieux: collaboration with local NGOs and community organisations could also lead to other experimentations.

The methodology for these experimentations, the learnings as well as practical support will be provided to the municipalities joining the Call for Project in Phase 2 of Time2Adapt. This will help building a toolbox useful for all the municipalities to replicate the experimentations.

Stay tuned for the Call for projects if you’d like to experiment this as well!

Building the snail bench at Jardin Clémenceau, Spring 2025 © Ophélie Tainguy

 

 

Reposted from Portico

How does Time2Adapt fit with the New European Bauhaus approach?

Designing sustainable and beautiful urban solutions, all together, is at the core of the Time2Adapt project. That makes it a truly New European Bauhaus project! Its most striking example? Four artistic installations which will be built in three areas of Lille and Loos.

Why the New European Bauhaus?

Time2Adapt uses time-based urbanism as a lever to address the need for cool places when urban temperatures reach uncomfortable and life-threatening highs. It is part of part of the first call of the European Urban Initiative (EUI) programme under the theme of New European Bauhaus. Continue reading

Crackling and moist houses, it’s a soil issue: GfW’s seven approaches to addressing the roots of the problem

Tuindorp Oostzaan’s housholds issues © GfW

 Tuindorp Oostzaan’s flooding issues © GfW

Tuindorp Oostzaan’s flooding issues © GfW

Your house is sinking into the soil. It seems unstable on the floor. Cracklings appear on the external walls. Your indoor walls are full of mold and fungus. And now, heavy rain makes you walk in water in your garden, all around your house, in your neighbourhood. The trees don’t stay put and fall. Your health is seriously affected. 

You’re not in an episode of ‘Extrapolations’. This is the reality of the 17 000 inhabitants of Tuindorp Oostzaan, in Amsterdam.

Once an ideal garden city neighbourhood in the Northen part of Amsterdam and designed according to the concepts of community spirit, greenery, village-like atmosphere, it faces nowadays increasing challenges related to houses and neighbourhood structural issues, worsening with years and climate change.

Most of the underlying issues, such as groundwater management are not to be seen by untrained eyes. Yet, they will be the key focus of the two main renovation activities of the EUI Ground for Well-Being (GfW) project: the redesign and transformation of the Plejadenplein – a main square in the centre of the neighbourhood – and the redesign of the main mobility axis of the area, Meteorenweg.

GfW seeks to tackle both the physical problems caused by the difficult soil and the social challenges in the neighbourhood in an integrated manner.  Seven key components form the core of the project, before climate change worsens even more the situation.

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Garden cities: from past utopias to nowadays’ challenges

Garden cities are generally known to be utopian urban planning projects striving to create better communities and better lives. Based on socialist ideas, they emerged as ecosystems enabling their residents to benefit from improved living conditions while being connected to each other and to nature. Nowadays, in many cities around the world, the garden cites have become on the one hand a refuge for middle class people seeking to reconnect to each other and nature in a charming environment, on the other, areas prawn to many urban planning challenges (from bad insulation, to flooding to safety and security issues) – especially affecting those lower income households still living there.

From a garden cities utopian concept to nowadays’ challenges and striving solutions – this article sketches the way the EUI Ground for Wellbeing project led by the City of Amsterdam, in the district of Tuindorp Oostzaan, is anchored in its social and cultural heritage while seeking to address initial planning issues leading to current increasing soil subsidence and impermeability.

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“When it is hot, I like to eat an ice-cream”

How artists co-design with users of public space the design of artistic installations inviting to freshness

Papers and pens. Pictures and drawings. Meudon white on the windows. Reed pens. Walnut ink. Artists involved in Time2Adapt have used craft and local products to raise the creativity of users of public spaces to co-design the artistic installations that will shed light to some of the cool islands of the cities of Lille and Loos, inviting locals to make the most out of them.

What do you do when you are hot? Where do you go to? What and where would you like to go to? Can you tell us more about the area in which you live?  These are some of the questions which have guided 4 artists in co-designing Time2Adapt artistic installations with users of public space through their concertation residences during the month of March 2025.

reenhouse of Jardin des Plantes by Julien Kieffer (c) Marcelline Bonneau
Greenhouse of Jardin des Plantes by Julien Kieffer (c) Marcelline Bonneau

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