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Climate adaptation as a spiritual and social task

In cooperation with the environmental department of the Catholic Church of Carinthia, PLANUM has taken on a pioneering role in the field of climate adaptation with the “Refugium” project. In view of the increasingly hot summers, it will ensure that church rooms and the inner courtyards of church facilities in Klagenfurt are consciously designed as places of relaxation, tranquillity and cooling and are opened to the public.

 

The parish church of St. Egid in the center of Klagenfurt’s old town was won as a partner for the first implementation project.
The pilot project is being implemented on a small garden plot in the outdoor area of the St. Egid parish center.
Although only a total of 100 m² is available, all the main elements in the garden will be realized, a drinking fountain (as a non-consumptive thirst quencher), a climate tree (to provide shade), seating, a spring stone (to improve the microclimate) and attractive planting with a focus on biodiversity.

 

The initiative is an invitation to municipalities, cities and church institutions to become active together – for a liveable, people-friendly and climate-resilient future.

 

The project was presented in Klagenfurt on June 3 as a prelude to the Carinthian Heat Protection Day.

Further information here: Refugium

Further press releases:
1stHeat Protection Day: Carinthia prepares for the heat: Church provides cooling refuge
Spiritual and social task: Church creates cooling refuges – Klagenfurt

Queries:
Marie-Therese Fallast, mt.fallast@planum.eu
Harald Jost, harald.jost@kath-kirche-kaernten.at

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Home, Mobility

Our research project InKoMob (“Inter-municipal cooperationto promote sustainable mobility patterns“) was launched in September.


The potential for promoting sustainable mobility patterns through inter-municipal cooperation to ensure regional mobility provision is being investigated. Additions to the service and accompanying measures should enable disadvantaged user groups to participate better in mobility.

The project places a strong focus on involving regional stakeholders and the population in order to develop optimized packages of services and measures for them. To this end, we are holding several stakeholder workshops and talking to those involved.

The main task of INKOMOB is to develop a guideline and criteria catalog for municipalities. The collected knowledge on inter-municipal mobility provision is bundled and serves as a basis for transferring the findings to other regions.

The research project team is made up of:

  • Austrian Institute of Technology GmbH (AIT) as consortium leader

  • PLANUM Fallast & Partner GmbH

  • Verkehrsverbund Kärnten GmbH

  • Klagenfurt Mobil GmbH

  • International Project Management Agency Klagenfurt on Lake Wörthersee (IPAK) GmbH

We look forward to a productive collaboration and expect exciting results to promote even more sustainable mobility patterns in the future.


Queries:
Anna-Sophie Klamminger, MSc, klamminger@planum.eu
Dr. Kurt Fallast, fallast@planum.eu
Dipl.-Ing. Katja Schmidt-Hengst, schmidt-hengst@planum.eu

Image source: Verkehrsverbund Kärnten GmbH

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Home, Mobility

In September 2024, the state of Carinthia published the action guideline:
“Flexible mobility in urban and rural areas: a micro-public transport strategy for everyone who wants to get around Carinthia sustainably”.
The strategy deals with demand-oriented transport and multimodal mobility. In view of the current challenges, the mobility turnaround is essential. This strategy provides a guideline for action that enables rapid and uncomplicated implementation.

The use of demand-oriented and flexible micro-public transport solutions significantly improves mobility services in rural areas. Dependence on private cars is reduced.

The basics and framework conditions of micro-public transport are presented in order to then provide a well-founded guideline for action with strategies, objectives and measures.

Further information can be found here:
https://www.bedarfsverkehr.at/content/Hauptseite

You can download the full version of the strategy here:
Full version strategy


This strategy was developed by Dr. Albert Kreiner, Dipl.Ing. Hans Schuschnig, Dipl.-Ing. Jörg Putzl and Timotheus Zankl, MSc.
PLANUM was responsible for the technical support and revision: DI Dr. Kurt Fallast and Anna-Sophie Klamminger, Msc.

For queries: klamminger@planum.eu; fallast@planum.eu

PLANUM is currently continuing its research into micro public transport systems in our recently launched “INKOMOB” research project. The project “Inter-municipal cooperationto promote sustainable mobility patterns aims to strengthen climate-friendly mobility beyond municipal boundaries. More information will soon be available on our website.

The collage is based on a picture by Roman Kraft

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