Organized jointly by the Ecoparc Association and the Laboratory of Architecture and Sustainable Technologies (LAST) of the École Polytechnique Fédérale de Lausanne (EPFL), in partnership with Tracés magazine, the Forum des transitions urbaines took place on 12 September at the Microcity auditorium on the EPFL campus in Neuchâtel (Switzerland). Entitled “Towards bioclimatic cities?”, the event enabled participants to discover a wealth of projects, studies, and developments underway in urban territories in transition. The lectures are now available online.
Despite all the efforts made since the beginning of the century to limit greenhouse gas emissions, we are unfortunately still waiting for a global turnaround. In addition to the challenge of protecting the climate, we now also face the challenge of adapting our living environments to the consequences of climate change. As home to the majority of the world's inhabitants and jobs, towns and cities are at the forefront of this transformation. Even more so as they are warming up more than the surrounding countryside, due to the urban heat island effect.
Analysis of today's cities shows that they are not really adapted to the expected global warming. Without a series of rapid, significant and convergent actions, their habitability could be partially called into question in the medium term. In the face of this uncertain trend, some adaptation measures have already been clearly identified to act favorably on built-up areas, public spaces and landscapes. Low-tech acclimatization of buildings, de-sealing of urban soils, reinforcement of biodiversity-rich linkages, preservation of fresh-air corridors, tree planting in public spaces and a significant increase in the urban canopy are just some of the concrete ways in which we can ambitiously and creatively anticipate these now inescapable challenges.
Throughout the day, the conferences offered participants a rich overview of key issues, innovative approaches and pioneering experiences :
As a biennial event, the Forum des transitions urbaines thus pursues its objective of promoting knowledge transfer and exchange between people from different backgrounds, particularly from the academic world, the public, and private sectors.