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Project ID
DRP0200159
Project title

Improving urban climate change adaptation capacities by testing and promoting the ‘sponge city’ methodology on transnational level

Project manager, contact details
Borkovits Balázs, borkovits.balazs@pte.hu, +36 30 4961880
Academic supervisor, contact details
Dr Pirkhoffer Ervin (pirkhoff@gamma.ttk.pte.hu), Dr Czigány Szabolcs (sczigany@gamma.ttk.pte.hu)
Total project budget
2.028.509,20 EUR
Total budget of UP
210.550,00 EUR
Project start date
Project end date
Coordinator
Borkovits Balázs, borkovits.balazs@pte.hu, +36 30 4961880
Lead Partner
University of Pécs, HU
Partner Organisations
University of Pécs
Koprivnica water supply LLC
Paris-Lodron University Salzburg
BSC, Business support centre L.t.d., Kranj
Municipality of Prague 9
University of Ss. Cyril and Methodius in Trnava
University of Mostar
City Hall of Chisinau Municipality
RARIS - Regional Development Agency of Eastern Serbia
ASPECT - Management and Intercultural Relations
Capital City Podgorica
Satu Mare County Intercommunity Development Association
E-institute
General description

Danube Region is affected by natural disasters resulting from climate change, increasing the intensity and frequency of heat waves, droughts, fire incidents, and heavy rainfalls with flash floods on local level. Since 75% of the region’s population lives in cities, these anomalies put the citizens at particular risk. Local community leaders must be prepared for these weather anomalies. Urban water management have so far mainly followed traditional approaches, including large-scale gray infrastructure investments, lacking innovation and the exploitation of ecosystem services. Their social acceptance is usually hindered as citizens are not involved in design and testing. Settlements have different micro-climatic, infrastructural, financial, legal and social backgrounds in DR, but they all need support in forecasting local climate risks and identifying effective interventions. Transnational cooperation is needed for this knowledge exchange and for mainstreaming the conclusions to macroregional level. The cross-sectoral partnership aims to spread the Sponge City concept in DR to answer these challenges. A sponge city is an urban area which has been designed to cope with excess rainfall using a variety of techniques. It mitigates/prevents urban floods by 
providing the area with the ability to naturally absorb the water. It reduces the extent of impermeable  surfaces and increases the amount of absorbent land: green surfaces, green walls, bioswales, inner-city lakes, rain gardens, permeable pavements. Supplementing this approach with channelling and storage systems also helps to counter water shortages. The project analyses the hydroclimatic characteristics and water management practices of 12 pilot settlements, sets up a toolbox to support the planning of sponge city measures, tests and promotes the tools by participative elaboration of local action plans, feasibility studies and demonstration investments. Partners mainstream the results to national and EU level.

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