Europe is melting 🥵
And while we’re all dreaming of AC right now, there’s something that can make cities feel way cooler: TREES! 🌳
Cities heat up faster than surrounding areas due to the urban heat island effect, where concrete and asphalt trap heat, pushing temperatures higher and making heatwaves more dangerous.
Trees are one of the simplest and most effective solutions, because:
🌿 They cool our streets by at least 5°C
🌿 A mature tree can absorb over 22 kg of CO2 per year on average
🌿 They make cities healthier and more liveable
Yet fewer than half of European urban residents live close to a park or green area.
With the Nature Restoration Law, the EU has committed to ensure there is no net loss of green urban space and tree cover by 2030, and a steady increase in their total area from 2030.
How are you surviving the heat?
#heatwave #europe
Extreme heat has become a defining structural challenge for global construction, driving a decisive shift toward sustainable building design that prioritises both thermal comfort and low carbon impact. Rising temperatures expose the shortcomings of past practices built primarily around winter energy efficiency, amplifying the urgency of environmental sustainability in construction. Whole life carbon assessment now underpins planning decisions, linking embodied carbon in materials with operational energy to deliver net zero carbon buildings capable of adapting to climatic extremes. Design priorities are expanding beyond insulation to include dynamic ventilation, reflective façades and adaptive urban forms that integrate resource efficiency in construction and circular construction strategies.
New policy coalitions and digital tools are accelerating this transition. The 24/7 Carbon Free Coalition exemplifies a data-led approach to decarbonising the built environment, encouraging firms to measure the carbon footprint of construction and pursue net zero whole life carbon ambitions. Advances in mapping technologies now expose regions where poor housing quality amplifies environmental risk, directing investments in green infrastructure and sustainable urban development. These insights reinforce life cycle thinking in construction and whole life carbon accountability as fundamental to equitable and resilient growth.
Offsite manufacturing is emerging as a core part of low carbon construction strategies. Controlled production environments deliver precision, reduce waste and improve building lifecycle performance, embodying both economic and environmental benefits. The integration of eco-design for buildings with lifecycle assessment ensures that renewable building materials and low embodied carbon materials align with measurable life cycle cost outcomes. Certifications such as BREEAM and BREEAM v7 are gaining prominence as benchmarks for sustainable building practices and carbon neutral construction.
The sector faces a decisive decade where sustainable design, circular economy in construction and decarbonising the built environment converge into a single mandate: to create low carbon buildings and infrastructure capable of enduring a rapidly changing climate. This evolution defines the frontier of green construction—transforming policy ambition into tangible performance, ensuring every project contributes to carbon footprint reduction and supports a genuinely sustainable future for the built environment.
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