Contextualizing and generalizing drivers and barriers of urban living labs for climate resilience

Author:

Quadros Aniche Laura1ORCID,Edelenbos Jurian1,Gianoli Alberto1,Caruso Rochelle2,DeLosRíos‐White Marta Irene3,Pyl Wissink‐Nercua Charmae1ORCID,Undabeitia Asier4,Enseñado Elena Marie1,Gharbia Salem5

Affiliation:

1. Institute for Housing and Urban Development Studies (IHS), Erasmus University Rotterdam Rotterdam the Netherlands

2. ERINN Innovation Dublin Ireland

3. European Network of Living Labs (ENoLL) Brussels Belgium

4. Naider Bilbao Spain

5. Centre for Environmental Research Innovation and Sustainability CERIS, Department of Environmental Science Atlantic Technological University Letterkenny Ireland

Abstract

AbstractUrban Living Labs are open innovation ecosystems that integrate research and innovation activities within urban communities. However, while solutions co‐created and tested in the Urban Living Labs must be contextualized and tailored to each city's uniqueness, broader impact requires generalization and systematic replication across geographical, institutional, and sectoral boundaries. This article examines nine Living Labs in European coastal cities, identifying several barriers and drivers for mainstreaming and upscaling solutions to increase climate resilience through the Living Lab Integrative Process. Our analysis focuses on three main categories. First, social and cultural aspects highlighted include stakeholder engagement and awareness, communication, and dissemination. Second, we assess institutional and political aspects, such as silos, bureaucracy, and resources. Last, we investigate technical factors as knowledge and experience, technical and internal capacity, data availability and accessibility, climate‐related policies and actions, and long‐term perspective. The results suggest that while some barriers and drivers are common across the cases, providing generalizable patterns, there are also specific differences requiring tailored solutions at the local scale. Nonetheless, the diversity in drivers indicates the potential for sharing knowledge across cases to translate, embed, and scale solutions, enhancing the transition toward climate resilience. Learning and innovation in real‐life contexts are fundamental in the Living Lab approach, and our findings demonstrate that cross‐case learning can enhance an iterative process of contextualizing and generalizing innovative climate solutions.

Funder

European Climate, Infrastructure and Environment Executive Agency

Publisher

Wiley

Reference51 articles.

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4. A flood vulnerability index for coastal cities and its use in assessing climate change impacts

5. Barrett L. Galik G. Hristova D. Cowie P. &Caro F.(2017).Challenges and opportunities in the iSCAPE Cities. Project report Improving the Smart Control of Air Pollution in Europe (iSCAPE) project European Community's H2020 Programme. Available online athttps://www.iscapeproject.eu/resources-2/.

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