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Ville régénérative : participez au nouveau dossier thématique de Construction21

Notre membre Construction21 publiera en mai 2026 un nouveau dossier collaboratif consacré à  la ville régénérative. Copiloté par le CROAIF et la Fédération Cinov, ce dossier est ouvert à toutes celles et ceux qui souhaitent partager leurs retours d’expérience, méthodes et visions pour des territoires capables de renouveler les écosystèmes et de renforcer leur résilience.

Et si la ville de demain ne se contentait plus de limiter ses impacts mais contribuait activement à réparer le vivant ?

Aujourd’hui, face à l’intensification des crises climatiques, écologiques et sociales, un nouveau cap émerge, celui de la ville régénérative.

Une ville régénérative ne cherche pas seulement à « faire moins de mal ». Elle vise à produire du mieux. Mieux pour les écosystèmes, mieux pour les habitants, mieux pour les territoires. Elle restaure les milieux naturels, recrée de la biodiversité, régénère les ressources, renforce les liens sociaux et redonne au vivant toute sa place dans la fabrique urbaine.

Partout, des expérimentations fleurissent. Des projets qui restaurent les sols, réactivent les cycles de l’eau, réinventent les modèles économiques, renforcent la résilience territoriale ou encore transforment les modes de gouvernance. Mais ces initiatives restent souvent fragmentées, locales, encore en construction. Pour changer d’échelle, Construction21 propose de partager les visions, confronter les pratiques, documenter les apprentissages et construire une culture commune de la régénération urbaine.

Votre expérience, vos projets, vos méthodes, vos questionnements et vos convictions sont essentiels pour éclairer les chemins possibles vers des villes réellement régénératives.

Comment passer de la promesse à la mise en œuvre ? Quels outils, indicateurs et modèles économiques pour soutenir la régénération ? Comment intégrer pleinement le vivant dans les processus de décision et de conception ? Quels retours d’expérience, réussites ou limites peuvent inspirer d’autres territoires ?

Pourquoi contribuer ?

Les dossiers collaboratifs de Construction21 cumulent plus de 5 millions de vues depuis 2017. Diffusés largement (newsletter, LinkedIn, relais partenaires et presse), ils participent activement à l’enrichissement des pratiques professionnelles et à l’évolution du secteur vers une construction plus sobre et désirable.

À l’issue de la publication, une conférence se tiendra le 16 septembre 2026 à l’Assemblée nationale, réunissant le comité éditorial, les contributeurs, des députés et les membres de Construction21 pour débattre des perspectives ouvertes par la ville régénérative.

 

Modalités de participation

Les professionnels souhaitant contribuer sont invités à envoyer une proposition d’article (quelques lignes présentant l’angle envisagé) avant le 13 mars 2026 à : dossiers@construction21.fr

Après validation par le comité de rédaction :

  • Première version attendue pour le 17 avril 2026

  • Publication du dossier à partir du 18 mai 2026

Format indicatif : 6 000 à 10 000 signes, accompagnés de 1 à 3 visuels.

About Nina

A student at Sciences Po Paris, enrolled in the Master’s program in Territorial and Urban Strategies, Nina is interested in public policies at the territorial level as well as the challenges of ecological transition.

As part of a student project during her first year of the Master’s program, she worked with the National Housing Agency (Anah) on eco-design in urban renovation. She then took a gap year to gain more professional experience, completing two internships: the first with the City of Paris, where she contributed to the implementation of the first plan to combat energy poverty, and the second with the Paris Urban Planning Agency (Apur), where she worked on the territorialization of public health.

Currently in her second year of the Master’s program, she is beginning an apprenticeship with the association France Villes et Territoires Durables.

 

About Solène

Mission Officer, Working Group, and Projects. Student at the Urban School of Sciences Po Paris, focusing on the ecological transition of cities.

About Quentin

Motivated by climate issues and planetary boundaries, Quentin decided to study land use planning at the Ecole Nationale des Ponts et Chaussées. His experience in associative field at the Fresque du Climat, helped him to better understand the stakes of the ecological bifurcation. Between his native Haute-Savoie and his home town Rennes, where he gained expertise in mobility and sustainable agriculture, he is now based in Paris to deploy the Sustainable City by France’s territorial workshops throughout the country.

About Alice

After five years’ study at Sciences Po Lyon, with a specialization in territorial transitions, Alice joined Sustainable City by France (France Villes et territoires Durables). She actively contributes to the deployment of the association’s territorial workshops and working groups.
See her LinkedIn profile 
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Currently studying as a second-year Master’s student in International Relations at University Paris 1 Panthéon-Sorbonne, Tara holds a Bachelor’s degree from INALCO, with a double-major in Hindi language, and International relations / Environmental studies. Her work with us is in line with her former experiences at UNESCO and the Ministry of Europe and Foreign Affairs, thus deepening her professional expertise in the field of environmental diplomacy and international cooperation for sustainable development.

See her LinkedIn profile

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She holds a Master’s degree in Development Economics from the Panthéon-Sorbonne University and is currently studying for a Master’s degree in International Relations and Action Abroad at the same university. She approaches the problems of sustainable cities and territories through these different perspectives and her international experiences.

About Isabelana

Isabelana is a Mexican journalist who holds a Master’s degree in Digital Communication and Data Analysis from the Sorbonne University. She previously worked in communication and press relations in the cultural sector in France and Mexico. Today, she is interested in ecological actions and solutions to preserve the environment and the biodiversity.

About Camille

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With a background in social sciences, art history and architecture, Camille has worked in communication within the VINCI group: from major international projects to La Fabrique de la Cité, a think tank dedicated to urban foresight.

About Alexandra

A geographer by training (Saint Petersburg State University), she started as a geographer and economist at the Academy of Agricultural Economics (Russia), before pursuing her career in France as an administrative and accounting assistant (Air Liquide, Association TGV Provence Côte d’Azur, COFHUAT, Groupe Hervé)

About Marion

Trained in international and European affairs between England and France as part of a double degree at Sciences-Po Lille / University of Kent, Marion started her career in advocacy and institutional relations of non-governmental organisations, in the fair trade sector (Max Havelaar France label). Her experiences are also linked to territories, with a passage in decentralised cooperation at the level of a departmental council.

About Sébastien

Before joining the SCbF team, he held several positions in local government management. From elected official and deputy mayor of his native city Besançon, in charge of university relations and international cooperation, to Director of Economic Development of the City of Pantin, to Chief of staff in Montreuil – where he notably piloted the in-depth redesign of the urban project towards more ecology and sustainable development – he continued his career as Senior Resilience Officer of the City of Paris.
He promotes a holistic and systemic vision of sustainable development and brings his expertise in territorial resilience, ecological and social transition.