URBACT Good Practices

145 results

 

To view the 116 URBACT Good Practices eligible to lead a Transfer Network, please filter by "Year of label" and select "2024".

Only the Good Practices tagged as "Looking for Project Partners" in the database have already expressed the interest to lead a Transfer Network. However, URBACT Good Practices may change their status to "Looking for Project Partners" or to "Partnership complete" until the end of the call (30 June).

 

  • Turin / Italy

    Areas of Commercial Coverage

    An innovative model to keep small, local markets alive and promote social cohesion

  • Idrija / Slovenia

    Creation of a new NGO platform

    The new ‘Towns’ Living Room’, established by the municipality in a vacant building, involves the heads of the city administration, active citizens, social services, development agency, public library and nursing home, local clubs and various associations

  • Lille / France

    Experimenting with new types of grants in deprived areas which are not eligible for social funding anymore

    Further develop the area-based policy for deprived neighbourhoods by applying innovative elements in territorial sense, involving new types of local stakeholders and experimenting with new empowering methods

  • Debrecen / Hungary

    Supporting strategy-creation in the field of internationalization

    Data-driven local governance aiming at improving the life of internationals

  • Naples / Italy

    Civic eState

    Community management of common goods through Civic Uses

    https://urbact.lmc-preprod.fr/festival/programme

  • Sheffield

    Urban waterways strategy & action plan

    Using collaborative planning and partnership to integrate bottom-up local input with top-down strategic priorities

  • Utrecht / Netherlands

    U-RLP

    Utrecht Refugee Launch Pad

  • Torrent / Spain

    City management plan for diversity

    A step-by-step approach for reducing disparities

  • Monaghan / Ireland

    The town team

    A partnership approach for reinvigorating town centres