Today’s Solutions: April 10, 2025

Research shows that urban greenspace not only enhances air quality but also supports biodiversity and the mental health of residents. The city of Basel, Switzerland has successfully interjected greenery into its concrete jungle by making urban greenery (and all of its benefits) a legal requirement for new buildings.

Basel’s city planning authority made green roofs compulsory 15 years ago, which has added much-needed green space defuse to humidity and cool buildings more quickly during the summer season, translating to less energy spent on air conditioning systems.

As part of Basel’s biodiversity strategy, the law makes green spaces mandatory on all new and retrofitted buildings with flat roofs, and since green roofs become compulsory on all new construction projects, more than one million square meters of rooftop greenery have been established. The implementation of urban green space into the construction laws ensures that these sustainable changes in Basel’s architecture will be long-lasting.

“Here in Basel, we noticed that [flat roofs] were not being used enough and [could be] valuable areas for nature,” explains Dr. Stephan Brenneisen, a researcher at the Institute for the Environment and Natural Resources in Zurich. “That’s why we started, together with our colleagues from the building department, and in particular, the then Director Barbara Schneider, to integrate these areas into the planning law, to define guidelines and this to implement these projects in Basel.”

As the world suffers from heat waves and record high temperatures, Basel prepares to meet the future that climate change holds for its residents. The city hopes that their green construction success will encourage other regions to adopt similar policies, for their own good and for the planet.

Solutions News Source Print this article
More of Today's Solutions

Super small dissolvable pacemaker offers safer, simpler heart treatment

BY THE OPTIMIST DAILY EDITORIAL TEAM In a brilliant medical innovation, researchers developed the smallest known pacemaker—smaller than a grain of rice—that dissolves in ...

Read More

Tiny sparks, massive implications: how water droplets may have ignited life o...

BY THE OPTIMIST DAILY EDITORIAL TEAM Could the origin of life have begun not with a bolt from the blue but with something far ...

Read More

Listen to this fascinating piece of ambient music composed by stars

Though we can’t hear them, stars propagate some incredibly soothing soundscapes through the vacuum of space. And for the first time, music composed from ...

Read More

Cracking the case: Is joint cracking harmful or simply satisfying?

Many of us have been warned about cracking our knuckles due to stories of arthritis and joint problems. Is there any truth to this ...

Read More