SEK 8 million goes to research on urban underground space
2021-06-22
Magdalena Kuchler’s project “SubCity: Future imaginaries of the city subsurface” has been granted SEK 8 million from Formas.
The Swedish Research Council Formas has granted the project SEK 7,995,828 under the thematic call “Planning for transformation”. The study is an interdisciplinary collaboration between Natural Resources and Sustainable Development (NRHU) and Geophysics, with Ari Tryggvason as co-applicant.
A rising rate of urbanisation, coupled with climate change impacts and the necessity of low-carbon transition, will put considerable pressure on the increasingly stretched metropolitan areas. To meet these challenges, society will need to significantly and even radically enhance its use of the subsurface below the city landscape. The “underground” is a place that, once transformed, becomes a permanent future. For this reason, underground spatial planning requires strategically driven, comprehensive, and long-term visions.
In 2018, the population of Stockholm County was around 2.3 million, a number expected to increase by more than one million in 2050. This increase will place high demands on land use within the City of Stockholm. In addition, climate change and the transition to a society free of fossil fuels will put further pressure on urban land use. At present, however, the Stockholm metropolitan area lacks any urban underground plan or strategy. Instead, the city’s use of the subsurface is made on the “first-come, first-serve” basis.
By taking Stockholm municipality as our analytical point of entry, the overall purpose of this project is twofold: 1) to develop conceptual tools and empirical insights for understanding the social and technical dynamics of sustainable urban underground planning and use; 2) to provide practical solutions and guidance for long-term planning and envisioning sustainable use of the underground space.
- The function of cities is already increasingly dependent on the growing number of complex underground infrastructures. The interplay between these rapid geophysical changes and current and future social needs in urban environments lays the foundation for the design of future cities. The purpose of the study is to understand these interactions and identify the possibilities of including the underground into the long-term urban planning in Stockholm, says Magdalena Kuchler, Senior Lecturer in Natural Resources and Sustainable Development at the Department of Earth Sciences.
The project also involves Associate Professor Mikael Höök from Natural Resources and Sustainable Development at the Department of Earth Sciences and Researcher Corine Wood-Donnelly at the Institute of Russian and Eurasian Studies (IRES).
For more information contact Magdalena Kuchler.
Previous news articles on urban underground space:
SubCity: future imaginaries of the city subsurface.
Facts with information from the project
The project will be guided by two interrelated objectives: 1) to investigate what currently happens in the city subsurface and identify challenges and opportunities regarding the future transition of the urban underground space; 2) to anticipate future visions of the city subsurface in terms of transportation, storage, energy, and public uses.
The project will be conducted in an interdisciplinary environment involving two research units, Natural Resources and Sustainable Development (NRHU) and Geophysics, at the Department of Earth Sciences, Uppsala University.
News from the Department of Earth Sciences
-
First place in making research more sustainable
-
Breaking the isolation of Ukrainian university teachers
-
Mikael Höök är ny föreståndare för CEMUS
-
Europeiskt samarbete gör det lättare att förutsäga framtidens klimat
-
Minuscule fossil finds shed light on the aftermath of the Cambrian Explosion
-
Energi från underjorden kan bli en del av framtidens energiförsörjning
-
Wide income gaps lead to higher mortality rates during flood disasters
-
Urban water crises driven by elites’ unsustainable consumption
-
Atmosfäriska cirkulationsmönster bidrar till extremväder
-
Nöjda doktorander på Geocentrum
-
Turné mot vetenskapsförnekelse
-
Slutrapport från Expertgruppen för hållbara mineral- och metallflöden
-
6 miljoner kronor till projekt som ska undersöka svenska litiumfyndigheter
-
Skatterna man tappade: metaller och mineral i gruvavfall
-
Akademiföreläsning med Anna Rutgersson: Extremväder i ett föränderligt klimat
-
International research project will study past climate changes in the European Arctic
-
Keen to see more applied environmental policy research
-
Björn Lund om jordbävningen i Turkiet och Syrien
-
Veijo Pohjola: "Iskärnor kan avslöja hemligheter om klimatet"
-
Worms, bacteria and fungi help reduce carbon dioxide emissions
-
The planet’s wellbeing and human health in focus in this year’s Celsius-Linnaeus Lectures
-
A 1 669 665 SEK grant from The European Research Council enhances our knowledge around extreme weather events
-
Lina Mtwana Nordlund elected into global expert panel for ocean observation
-
Mikael Höök kommenterar protesterna runt kolgruvan i Tyskland
-
Europas största fyndighet för sällsynta jordartsmetaller har hittats i Kiruna
-
Värmebölja i Europa – forskare varnar för att den här typen av extremväder blir allt vanligare
-
6 miljoner kronor från Formas till forskning om livsmedelsberedskap och skydd av jordbruksmark
-
Unprecedented droughts are expected to exacerbate urban inequalities in Southern Africa
-
Generous software donation to Uppsala University
-
Discovery of world’s oldest DNA breaks record by one million years
-
Jordskalv i Norduppland: ”Med svenska mått stort”
-
”Krisen för biologisk mångfald ställer krav på starkt ledarskap och förändrat tänkande”
-
Calendar created from winning weather images
The winning pictures in our weather picture contest have now been collected in a calendar for 2023. The calendar can be bought in the university's webshop or on site in Ekonomikum, BMC, the University Library and the Ångström Laboratory.
-
Fyra nya öppna onlinekurser i klimatledarskap
-
Listen to Sverker C. Jagers inaugural lecture
-
Premiär för öppna utbildningar om klimatomställning
-
Gabriele Messori promoted to Professor in Meteorology
-
Maria Ask: "Potentialen i geotermi är enorm"
Maria Ask, forskare i geofysik, intervjuas i senaste numret av Svensk geoenergi.
-
Steffi Burchardt bemöter falska rykten om vulkaner
-
Valentin Troll på SVT om det högsta vulkanutbrottet någonsin
Utbrottet på Tonga i början av 2022 påverkade hela atmosfären.
-
Uppsala universitet rankas högt inom hållbarhet
-
David Harper och Regine Hock nya hedersdoktorer vid teknisk-naturvetenskapliga fakulteten
-
Anna Rutgersson: klimatmodeller kan hjälpa oss att förutse följderna av klimatförändringarna
-
Många samverkar kring energiomställning på Gotland
-
Madeleine Bohlin i Fråga Lund
-
Is building more dams the way to save rivers?
Giuliano Di Baldassarre intervjuas i National Geographic.
-
Henrik Wachtmeister: ”Fler märkliga händelser kan ske i Europa”
-
Mikael Karlsson i Forskarpodden
"Det finns många myter kring klimatomställning. Hoppet tycker jag ligger i att forskningen visar väldig tydligt att det här är myter eftersom vi kan skapa jobb och tillväxt med klimatomställning."
-
En tredje sprängning undersöks av Svenska nationella seismiska nätet (SNSN)
-
Björn Lund kommenterar läckorna på gasledningarna Nord Stream
- Det är ingen tvekan om att det är sprängningar eller explosioner, säger Björn Lund, lektor i seismologi vid svenska nationella seismiska nätet, SNSN.