MOVE21 shares lessons from European cities on designing multimodal hubs that integrate people and goods, improve efficiency, and cut emissions.
urban transport
24 posts
Vienna is redesigning part of Neubaugürtel to add a safe, two-way cycleway near the Westbahnhof. The new route will cut travel distance for cyclists without disrupting car traffic.
With the theme “Mobility for Everyone,” this year’s campaign calls on local authorities to champion transport solutions that leave no one behind. Registration is now open to take part in Europe’s leading campaign for sustainable urban mobility.
The UPPER project launches U-KNOW and U-TRANSFER to help cities improve public transport through knowledge learning and practical tools.
Seville and Hannover are exploring data-driven approaches to multimodal planning with ETH Zurich to reduce car use and boost sustainable mobility.
The City of Graz presented its Mobility Plan 2040, aiming for safer, greener, and more inclusive transport. Shaped by public input and EU standards, it targets 80% sustainable travel by 2040, with broad citizen and district participation throughout.
Stockholm is expanding its Nova electric hydrofoil ferry service to daily operations in May 2025, offering faster, low-emission travel between Ekerö and the city centre.
Stockholm’s new Climate Action Plan sets bold goals for sustainable mobility—cutting transport emissions by 80%, electrifying vehicles and shipping, and reclaiming space for people, not cars.
Salzburg is setting out to modernise its transport system with a new Mobility Plan 2040, aiming to create a greener, more efficient and inclusive way for people to move around the city.
New funding will reduce the price of local and metropolitan public transport throughout 2025 in order to promote safer and greener mobility options across Spain.