Blueprints
Policy development guidelines for replicability and wider use in other cities
Last updated
Policy development guidelines for replicability and wider use in other cities
Last updated
By exploring and assimilating how CENTRINNO resources have been developed and applied in diverse territories, the document presents two levels of blueprints derived from the main projects results: the evolution of its core platforms and the primary outcomes of each CENTRINNO pilot city.
CENTRINNO Platforms’ Blueprints
Aligned with the five key concepts – circular economy, heritage, vocational training, innovation spaces and social inclusion – the document brings together the representation of the CENTRINNO platforms creation aimed at supporting a transition of bioregions, cities and neighborhoods towards regenerative, inclusive and productive territories of living and producing.
CENTRINNO Pilots’ Blueprints
In a more practical level and drawing inspiration from the CENTRINNO pilot cities – Amsterdam, Barcelona, Blönduós, Copenhagen, Geneva, Milan, Paris, Tallinn, and Zagreb – the document showcases nine distinctive journeys, accompanied by their main outputs for replication alongside a selection of practical tools developed by the local teams. Based on this knowledge, the report also provides potential recommendations for policy making following a peoplecentred approach. The recommendations include strategies for the establishment of distributed and physical Fab City Hubs reflecting on the solution of complex urban challenges Structure of the Document involving stakeholders at various levels in local policy decision-making, ranging from public and private actors and mature and emerging industries to cities and bioregions, Fab Labs, innovation centers and heritage-related organizations. The recommendations include strategies for the establishment of distributed and physical Fab City Hubs reflecting on the solution of complex urban challenges involving stakeholders at various levels in local policy decision-making, ranging from public and private actors and mature and emerging industries to cities and bioregions, Fab Labs, innovation centers and heritage-related organizations. Within this scope, this document does not intend to cover all the CENTRINNO resources and pilots’ solutions as inspiration for policy recommendations, but rather highlight specific best practices connected to the CENTRINNO main areas of intervention. It endeavors to distill the knowledge obtained from the project into an advocacy call, urging for the enhancement of our cities as more livable, productive and inclusive territories.