Urban and Smart Infrastructure

Urban and Smart Infrastructure

Problem

Urban environments depend on vast material flows embedded in transport systems, public spaces, and buildings that remain untracked, non-recoverable, and disconnected from digital infrastructure, creating inefficiencies and regulatory exposure.

Regulatory Pressure
Cities are governed by converging frameworks including Ecodesign requirements for durability and recyclability (European Parliament & Council, 2024a, Arts. 1–3, 5), Digital Product Passports for lifecycle traceability (European Parliament & Council, 2024a, Art. 11), Product Environmental Footprint standards for lifecycle measurement (European Commission, 2021, Annex I), and sustainability reporting obligations under CSRD (European Parliament & Council, 2022, Art. 19a).

System Shift

From static, linear materials to data-integrated, circular infrastructure systems.

Our Solution
Transforming Textiles develops textile systems with embedded traceability, recoverability, and sensor compatibility, enabling their integration into transport networks, public environments, and built infrastructure, supporting compliance with circular economy regulations while enabling real-time resource awareness.

Refrences

European Commission. (2021). Commission Recommendation (EU) 2021/2279 on Environmental Footprint methods.

European Parliament & Council. (2024a). Regulation (EU) 2024/1781 establishing a framework for the setting of ecodesign requirements for sustainable products (ESPR).

European Parliament & Council. (2022). Directive (EU) 2022/2464 on corporate sustainability reporting (CSRD).

European Parliament & Council. (2024d). Directive (EU) 2024/1785 on industrial emissions (recast).

Geissdoerfer, M., Savaget, P., Bocken, N. M. P., & Hultink, E. J. (2017). The circular economy – A new sustainability paradigm? Journal of Cleaner Production, 143, 757–768.