A. Lentini, J.P. Galve, B. Benjumea, S. Bricker, X. Devleeschouwer, P.M. Guarino, T. Kearsey, and F. La Vigna (2024)
The Urban Geo-climate Footprint approach: Enhancing urban resilience through improved geological conceptualisation
Cities, 155(105287).
Urban resilience is critical to allow cities to withstand the challenges of the 21st Century. One factor that is often
overlooked in such assessments is the role of the subsurface. A novel methodology called the Urban Geo-climate
Footprint (UGF) has been developed to classify cities quickly and comprehensively from geological and climatic
perspectives. The method operates on the fundamental assumption that cities with similar geologicalgeographical
settings will face similar challenges, due to both common geological issues and associated
climate impacts. The UGF approach has been applied to 41 European cities in collaboration with 17 Geological
Surveys of Europe, the results of the UGF analysis are presented along with a regional classification of the
geological resilience indicators. The UGF tool provides a semi-quantitative representation of the pressures driven
by geological and climatic complexity for the cities presented, providing for a first time such classification of the
urban environment. The advantage of this methodology lies in increasing awareness among non-experts and
decision-makers of the interplay between geological settings, climate change pressures, and anthropogenic activities.
Furthermore, it facilitates the exchange best practices among city planners to increase resilience, supporting
knowledge based decision making to promote actions and policies, that enhance geoscience-informed
climate justice.
Peer Review, Open Access, Impact Factor
- DOI: 10.1016/j.cities.2024.105287
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