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Invite colleaguesThe concept of a ‘regenerative city’: How to turn cities into regenerative systems
Abstract
During the COVID-19 pandemic, the world has been going through a veritable global ‘vulnerability experience’, ultimately revealing the interconnectedness of both global and local challenges such as health, pollution and climate change, biodiversity, and food and energy supply. The pandemic has prompted us to rethink the way our cities are designed in order to promote future-proof models that are in harmony with the local conditions and our planet’s boundaries. Any visionary role model of a city, however, is only as successful as it suggests clear transition pathways. This paper intends to show that the concept of a ‘regenerative city’ is such a model. Furthermore, it seeks to encourage to look at transitional trajectories ahead, be it in the food, energy, transport or health sector, from the implementational level of a city government. The regenerative city not only preserves the capacities and capabilities of ecosystems, but actively restores them by establishing closed, efficient and consistent material cycles between the city and the surrounding area. At the same time, the regenerative city is not only aimed at the regeneration of resources and the efficiency of ecosystems, it also has to regenerate its public spaces and built environments in a human-centred fashion, rather than centred on individual car use. One of the determining factors of a regenerative city aiming for greater resilience will be whether or not it is able to establish a restorative relationship with its environment, its hinterlands, and build a circular metabolism of goods.
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Author's Biography
Stefan Schurig is Secretary General of the Foundations Platform F20. He is an architect by training and has worked for some 25 years with civil society organisations, governments and parliamentarians around the globe on sustainability subjects. Prior to joining F20 in 2017, he was on the executive board of the World Future Council Foundation and an appointed member of the steering committee of the World Urban Campaign of the United Nations. Stefan was also spokesperson and member of the senior management team of Greenpeace Germany between 1998 and 2007.
Karina Turan works as Project Manager for advocacy and convening at the Foundations Platform F20. She holds a German/French bachelor’s degree (Bielefeld and Paris Diderot) in history and law. She graduated from the European School of Political and Social Sciences in Lille with a master’s degree in international security policy. Karina is also Maritime Ambassador of Eurocean’s Youth, the first network that connects young Europeans to the maritime world offered by the Surfrider Foundation.