Matosinhos becomes the first UN Resilience Hub in Portugal
The city joins the Province of Potenza (Italy) as the newest role models for the Making Cities Resilient 2030 initiative
He is also considering a charter for the protection of trees’ rights
Pierre Hurmic, the green mayor of Bordeaux, announced at a press conference yesterday that there will be no public display of a Christmas tree in the city this year. There will be no “dead trees” on the city’s squares as he called them, as this does not fit into his concept of revegetation. Furthermore, the new municipal team is expected to adopt a tree rights charter which will establish tree protection regulations by the end of the year.
“We will not put dead trees in the city squares. I remember this dead tree that we brought in every year… This is not at all our concept of revegetation,” said Pierre Hurmic (Bordeaux Respire), quoted by Huffington Post. The controversial decision to deprive the residents and visitors of the fifth-largest French city of a Christmas tree is motivated by the fact that it will only last a couple of weeks before dying, while the artificial trees made abroad are not a sustainable alternative either. Instead, traditional fir trees would be replaced by live shows.
Today he commented that he did not understand the negative reactions to his decision to dismiss the Christmas trees, explaining that he wants to give a more modern look to the place and that the idea conveyed by the symbolic decision is more important.
At the press conference held on 10 September on the occasion of his political comeback, Hurmic also shared his intentions to green several places in the city centre by the end of the year, including Place Pey Berland - in front of the famous Cathédrale Saint-André de Bordeaux, where the most imposing tree normally sits. He also intends to adopt a "tree rights charter" which sets out "tree protection regulations" before the end of the year.
The facility called, Alovera Beach, will be located 40 kms from Madrid
The move is part of the city’s strategy to act against the local affordable-housing crisis by focusing on the development of student accommodation
Peace and quiet in Baroque surroundings
Tallinn and Linz will be among the European cities eager to show their innovative side
According to the Eurostat report, women are significantly more educated than men in the EU
The Irish Environment Protection Agency released an updated map of affected regions in the country
It involves strategically placed pictograms on the pedestrian crossings
Never too early to fall in love with soft mobility
100 trees will take the place of 100 parking spaces in this Belgian town
The facility called, Alovera Beach, will be located 40 kms from Madrid
According to the Eurostat report, women are significantly more educated than men in the EU
It involves strategically placed pictograms on the pedestrian crossings
These will be spread across 11 EU countries and will serve to support the EU Missions
The European Commission has accepted to develop the idea
An interview about AYR, one of the 2021 New European Bauhaus Prize winners
An interview with Nigel Jollands and Sue Goeransson from the European Bank for Reconstruction and Development
An interview with the President of the City of Athens Reception & Solidarity Centre
A talk with the Mayor of Malmö on the occasion of the city’s UN Resilience Hub status