Amsterdam bans creation of new hotels
Another piece in the overall strategy to reduce tourist flows to the city
The new technology has proven to be cost-effective and environmentally friendly
Last month, Helsinki’s construction service company STARA began testing a new snow-melting and cleaning device that uses seawater heat. On 27 April, the municipality revealed the results of the experiment, noting that the new method has proven to be much more cost-effective and environmentally friendly than transporting snow to snow-receiving sites.
Expanding on this, the City of Helsinki shared that the innovative device used an average of 40 kWh of electricity to melt one snow load (costing only about 5 euros). This result is undoubtedly impressive when considering that transporting one snow load in Helsinki otherwise consumes much more energy and costs 80-120 euros instead.
“Such solutions save both costs and the environment. Of course, a single device will not replace a large snow receiving site, but when there are more devices in different parts of the city, the change will be significant. Next winter, we will try an even bigger and more energy efficient device,” explained the Head of Stara’s Urban Technology Maintenance Unit, Ville Alatyppö.
In addition to melting snow, the device can also filter debris and contribute to a cleaner city. According to a press release, more than 8 cubic metres of rubbish were discarded during the experiment. Taking this further, one snow load contained roughly 50 litres of rubbish (face masks, gloves, empty cans, bottles, and others).
The Production Manager for Urban Technology Maintenance at STARA, Tero Koppinen, commented on the device’s cleaning feature last month, sharing:
“In cramped Helsinki, there is little space for storing snow, and there is a lot of pressure to find solutions, especially near the beaches. If the experiment is successful, then we are closer to a solution where the snow no longer has to be dumped untreated into the sea.”
Now, after having melted 160 truckloads of snow and filtered out litres of rubbish, the device has indeed proven to be a success.
Legislators and magnates have to await a preliminary ruling from the European Court of Justice
The building will then serve as the site for a new museum dedicated to Finnish-Russian relations
Another piece in the overall strategy to reduce tourist flows to the city
In addition, the federal government has launched the National Week of Action against Bicycle Theft to raise awareness of the issue and the new solution
The facility will replace the need to have water supplied by tankers from Valencia
Modern traffic lights do more than regulate the flow of vehicles at crossroads, they also collect enormous amounts of data
Experimenting with public transport provision in Germany is clearly in a state of creative fervour
Legislators and magnates have to await a preliminary ruling from the European Court of Justice
It also set the standards for a better European parking card for people with disabilities
The benefit will last until the Dutch parliament adopts the transgender law
Experimenting with public transport provision in Germany is clearly in a state of creative fervour
It also set the standards for a better European parking card for people with disabilities
Urban dwellers across the EU are having a say in making their surroundings friendlier to people and the environment.
Forests in the EU can help green the European construction industry and bolster a continent-wide push for architectural improvements.
Apply by 10 November and do your part for the transformation of European public spaces
Catch up with some recommendations for the 2024 European Capital of Culture programme from the mayor of Tartu
An interview with the ICLEI regional director for Europe аfter the close of COP28
An interview with a member of the No Hate Speech Network team