Duurzaamheidskaart helps municipalities connect data, policy, and participation in a single environment, making sustainability projects easier to communicate and discuss.

Duurzaamheidskaart and Participation in Energy Transition
The energy transition affects every neighbourhood. Municipalities are working on initiatives such as solar energy, greening, insulation, charging infrastructure, heat networks, and climate adaptation.
At the same time, participation remains a challenge. Residents often receive reports, maps, and policy documents, but it is not always clear what these plans mean for their street, neighbourhood, or daily lives.
As a result, questions arise:
What will change in my neighbourhood?
Why was this location selected?
What alternatives have been considered?
How will these plans affect me?
Successful participation does not start with more documents. It starts with making information understandable and relevant to the people it impacts.
From Technical Plans to Meaningful Conversations
Duurzaamheidskaart helps municipalities make complex sustainability data accessible to residents.
Through interactive maps, dashboards, and scenario visualisations, residents can explore sustainability opportunities, understand proposed measures, and see the potential impact on their environment.
This creates a shared foundation for conversations between residents, policymakers, and project teams. Instead of discussions based on assumptions or incomplete information, stakeholders can engage using the same data and visual context.
By making technical information easier to understand, Duurzaamheidskaart helps turn complex plans into meaningful conversations.

Better Participation, Better Decisions
Duurzaamheidskaart can support participation processes, community meetings, and sustainability workshops.
Interactive maps allow residents to:
Explore developments in their neighbourhood
Ask questions about specific locations
Identify opportunities and concerns
Contribute ideas and local knowledge
Compare scenarios and discuss alternatives
For municipalities, this local knowledge is invaluable. Residents often have insights into how plans may affect their community, which locations are sensitive, and what solutions may be most practical.
This helps municipalities:
Improve transparency
Strengthen public support
Make better-informed decisions
Build trust with residents
Create more effective sustainability strategies
Participation becomes more than informing people. It becomes a collaborative process that improves outcomes for everyone involved.
Practical Example: Municipality of Eindhoven
The Municipality of Eindhoven uses Duurzaamheidskaart and the Duurzaamheidstafel to actively involve residents in sustainability initiatives.
During participation sessions, residents can view maps together with municipal staff, discuss scenarios, ask questions, and explore opportunities for sustainability improvements within their neighbourhood.
By presenting complex information in a visual and understandable way, conversations become more productive and constructive. Residents gain a better understanding of proposed measures, while municipalities receive valuable feedback that can strengthen decision-making.
The energy transition requires more than technical solutions. It requires public understanding, engagement, and support.

Want to discover how Duurzaamheidskaart can strengthen participation within your municipality?


