European cities face significant challenges affecting health and well-being, such as rising inequalities and vulnerabilities, limited access to green spaces, environmental threats (climate change, heatwaves, flooding), unhealthy lifestyles, food security and accessibility issues, food waste, ageing and loneliness, animals as new ‘citizens’, and migrant integration. Interventions are necessary to improve health and well-being and to promote innovative and inclusive policymaking. Small and medium-sized cities (SMSCs) and vulnerable groups experience these issues differently. To address these particularities, the IN-HABIT pilots have worked with vulnerable and fragile groups, including some in socioeconomically deprived areas. They tested various Visionary and Integrated Solutions (VIS) to tackle urban problems in SMSCs. Besides ensuring comparability, our aim was to offer a broad spectrum of working methods and useful solutions that different cities could adopt to address some of these urban challenges and improve inclusive health and well-being (IHW), tailored to their specific challenges, focus, and context.
Focusing on four European cities, Cordoba (ES), Lucca (IT), Riga (LV), and Nitra (SK), and Bogotá (CO) as a replicating city, IN-HABIT has investigated how to boost IHW through the co-design, co-deployment, co-management and co-assessment of VIS. These actions have leveraged undervalued resources such as culture, art, food, human-pet relationships, and NBS. The project has targeted peripheral SMSCs and addressed inequalities and vulnerabilities, such as limited access to green spaces, environmental threats, unhealthy lifestyles, food security, food waste, ageing and loneliness, animals as new ‘citizens’, and migrant integration. IN-HABIT has employed an inclusive, gender, and diversity approach to testing innovative solutions in vulnerable neighbourhoods and collectives. The project has specific focuses in each city:
- Cordoba explored the role of culture and heritage, particularly represented by patios (inner courtyards), as green and social cells in the city and created an intangible corridor between the humble patios of Las Palmeras, a vulnerable neighbourhood, and the UNESCO-awarded patios of Axarquia, at the historical city centre.
- Riga analysed the transformation of the Āgenskalns market into a multifunctional food hub.
- Lucca created the first Hum-animal smart city in Europe, focusing on innovative habits and inclusive hum-animal public spaces.
- Nitra improved healthy lifestyles, social inclusion of migrants, social cohesion, and relational well-being in Hidepark and connected the Dražovce isolated neighbourhood with the city.