Spatial Planning and Design with Soil (SPADES)
Research Project, 2024 – 2028

SPADES’ mission is to develop, test and implement soil-inclusive spatial planning strategies to support the transition towards soil health in Europe. Soil health is highly under pressure and the soil’s ability to perform essential ecosystem services should be improved to cope with pressures such as climate change and need such as a healthy living environment. Spatial planning and design are practices that, when enriched by soil care, can enhance the current status of soils and support societal challenges and needs, while avoiding unwanted trade-offs towards other areas, generations or functions. SPADES will therefor provide a comprehensive state of the art on both planning and design practices, as on soil instruments. To be able to make a transition in spatial planning and design towards healthy soils a fundamental understanding of the current mechanisms is key. SPADES will develop integrative instruments and improve the information basis and brokerage to bring the spatial planning and design field and soil sector together. This will contribute to the methodological basis. SPADES will work in 17 pilots in 10 member states, covering a broad range of land uses (urban, peri-urban and rural areas), time and spatial scales, and soil and planning challenges. This is done together with local practitioners and policy makers to develop fit-for-purpose soil-inclusive spatial strategies to support different goals such as land degradation neutrality and no net land take. The SPADES instruments will be presented in such a way (manual and navigator) so that they can be found by the right user, at the right phase of the planning and design process, and for the right purpose. SPADES supports soil literacy (by capacity building and communication, dissemination and exploitation activities) to a broad range of target groups to enable current practice to improve. To make this most effective, SPADES case partners are involved in these CDE and training activities.

Participants

Jenny Norrman (contact)

Chalmers, Architecture and Civil Engineering, Geology and Geotechnics

Collaborations

ACCES LA PAMANT PENTRU AGROECOLOGIE (ALPA)

SANCRAIU, Romania

ASOCIATIA DE DEZVOLTARE INTERCOMUNITARA ZONA METROPOLITANA BAIA MARE

BAIA MARE, Romania

ASOCIATIA URBAN 2020

BUCHAREST, Romania

BURST NONPROFIT KFT

ZSAMBEK, Hungary

Bureau de recherches géologiques et minières (BRGM)

Paris, France

Delft University of Technology

Delft, Netherlands

German Environment Agency (UBA)

Dessau-Rosslau, Germany

Grenoble Alpes Métropole

Grenoble, France

Helmholtz Centre for Environmental Research

Leipzig, Germany

ICLEI European Secretariat GmbH

Freiberg, Germany

ISOCARP Institute – Centre for Urban Excellence

Haag, Netherlands

MAGISTRAT DER LANDESHAUPTSTADT KLAGENFURT

Klagenfurt am Wörthersee, Austria

National Research Institute for Agriculture, Food and the Environment (INRAE)

Paris, France

Polytechnic University of Milan

Milano, Italy

Stichting Deltares

Tilburg, Netherlands

University of Lorraine

Nancy, France

Urban planning Institute of the Republic of Slovenia

Ljubljana, Slovenia

Funding

European Commission (EC)

Project ID: 101146122
Funding Chalmers participation during 2024–2028

Related Areas of Advance and Infrastructure

Sustainable development

Driving Forces

More information

Latest update

10/6/2024