Periodic Reporting for period 1 - HubCities (A New Approach to Sustainable Development of Airport and Seaport Territory through Citizen Science: HubCities)
Okres sprawozdawczy: 2024-01-01 do 2025-12-31
Projects under topics requiring the integration of social sciences and humanities were directly addressed in HubCities. Social sciences and humanities played a central role through the application of citizen science, qualitative research, and participatory design methods. Citizens were positioned as active contributors and knowledge holders, whose everyday experiences and social practices informed spatial analysis and decision-making. This integration ensured that technical, environmental, and infrastructural considerations were balanced with social, cultural, and ethical dimensions of urban development.Overall this section set the scene for the story of the project, demonstrating how HubCities responded to a clear societal and policy need and how its approach contributed to more inclusive, sustainable, and resilient urban development in airport and seaport territories across Europe.
A central scientific activity was the development of a conceptual and analytical framework that defined airport and seaport territories as socio-spatial systems rather than purely infrastructural zones. This framework integrated spatial analysis, governance structures, and everyday practices of residents and workers, forming the theoretical foundation for the HubCities methodology. The framework was informed by extensive field research, site observations, and comparative visits to logistics and transport hubs in several European cities, ensuring scientific robustness and transferability. On a technical level, the project designed and implemented the HubCities digital platform as a core research and engagement infrastructure. The platform was developed as a multilingual, online system that enabled user registration, survey distribution, data collection, and content dissemination. Its technical functionality was tested and refined to support citizen science data gathering in multiple geographic and linguistic contexts. The platform represented a key technical achievement, providing a scalable digital environment for participatory planning research. Empirical research constituted a major component of the work performed. Multilingual surveys were designed using citizen science principles and were deployed in three testbed regions: Graz (Austria), Koper (Slovenia), and Trieste (Italy). The surveys collected quantitative and qualitative data on environmental perceptions, mobility patterns, work conditions, and daily life in airport- and seaport dominated areas. In parallel, stakeholder mapping and qualitative fieldwork were conducted to identify governance structures, institutional actors, and participation barriers specific to logistics-intensive environments. Participatory workshops were organised and implemented in the testbed regions as part of the methodological testing. These workshops provided qualitative insights into spatial challenges and local knowledge while also serving as experimental settings for evaluating participation formats. Based on observed participation constraints, the methodology was adaptively refined toward hybrid and online engagement formats, demonstrating methodological flexibility and responsiveness to empirical findings. Data management and analysis constituted another key technical activity. A structured data management framework was established in line with FAIR principles and GDPR requirements. Collected datasets were organized across regions to enable comparison and scientific analysis. This ensured consistency, traceability, and reproducibility of results, strengthening the scientific validity of the project outcomes. One of the main scientific achievements of the project was the demonstration that citizen science methodologies could be effectively applied in complex, infrastructure-driven urban territories. The results showed that citizen-generated knowledge provided valuable insights that were typically absent from conventional planning processes. The project also achieved a validated, transferable methodology combining digital tools, participatory methods, and spatial analysis tailored to airport and seaport contexts. Overall, the HubCities project successfully delivered its planned technical and scientific objectives by developing an original methodological framework, implementing a functional digital platform, generating empirical data across multiple regions, and demonstrating the feasibility and relevance of citizen science in spatial planning for transport and logistics hubs.
Overall, the HubCities project delivered robust and transferable results with clear potential impacts, while clearly identifying the key needs required to ensure long-term uptake, sustainability, and success in citizen science-oriented planning for airport and seaport territories across Europe.