Urban Land Armchair Tour: A 25-Year Journey from Runways to Resilience for Denver's Central Park Neighborhood

Urban Land 1 year ago

When Denver's Stapleton International Airport closed in the mid-1990s, community leaders saw a chance to create a new, 4,700-acre (1,900 ha) community just six miles east of downtown. The project’s original developer, Forest City Stapleton (sold to Brookfield Properties in 2018), kicked off an urban transformation that is now nearing completion 25 years later. Known for extensive resilience strategies to reduce the effects of drought, flooding, and extreme heat, Central Park’s 12 neighborhoods are home to nearly 35,000 residents, with 60 parks as well as extensive pedestrian and bicycle trails.
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layersDaily Sustainability Digest

Published about 41 minutes ago



Europe’s transition towards a low carbon economy is entering a decisive phase as the European Commission extends carbon pricing to municipal waste under the Emissions Trading System by 2031. The inclusion signals a new commitment to reducing the carbon footprint of construction and accelerating decarbonising the built environment. Industrial sectors face mounting pressure to demonstrate compliance through whole life carbon assessment and lifecycle assessment, aligning infrastructure investment with measurable environmental sustainability in construction. The emphasis on embodied carbon in materials and whole life carbon performance is shifting regulatory focus towards data transparency and circular construction strategies.

The Scottish Government’s approval of two gigawatt-scale wind projects in the Moray Firth represents a milestone in sustainable construction and sustainable building design. Offshore contractors are adapting to hybrid infrastructure that merges energy generation and marine engineering, advancing eco-friendly construction that meets net zero whole life carbon targets. These projects demonstrate sustainable building practices integrated with green infrastructure and renewable building materials to achieve carbon neutral construction outcomes and reduce the carbon footprint of construction.

Lincolnshire’s forthcoming sustainable aviation fuel refinery confirms the sector’s evolution towards life cycle cost optimisation and resource efficiency in construction. The project model embraces life cycle thinking in construction through low embodied carbon materials and end-of-life reuse in construction, illustrating how eco-design for buildings and industrial systems underpin sustainable material specification. Urban and regional developments now depend on verifiable carbon footprint reduction and environmental product declarations (EPDs) rather than stated intent.

These changes define a reshaped market where sustainable design and circular economy in construction reinforce investment resilience. Sustainability is no longer peripheral but central to energy-efficient buildings and low carbon design. The sector’s credibility increasingly rests on BREEAM, BREEAM v7, and other frameworks assessing building lifecycle performance. Net zero carbon buildings and sustainable urban development have become the benchmarks of value, proving that in construction today, performance extends beyond structural integrity to demonstrable environmental impact of construction and whole life carbon accountability.

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