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Urban and Infrastructure Solutions

Urban and Infrastructure Solutions

Future-proof spaces: livable, sustainable, affordable 

Cities are changing fast. Climate change, resource scarcity, digitalization, and an evolving society require a new approach and holistic solutions.

How do we keep pace? Urban and Infrastructure Solutions is our comprehensive consulting approach for any type and scale of built environment. We cover it all, transforming industrial sites, municipal heating systems, and entire cities.

We bring integrated solutions and expert knowledge of sustainable technology, economy, and successful transformation.  

From Vision to Value – Your Leading Experts in Urban and Infrastructure Solutions. 

Our Priorities

Urban development and strategic locations

Urban development and strategic locations

From master planning to handover, we develop livable, economic, and sustainable urban spaces. 

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New energy, industry, and mobility

New energy, industry, and mobility

We transform technical infrastructures and companies with a focus on decarbonization and connected mobility.   

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Water, climate, and resilient infrastructure

Water, climate, and resilient infrastructure

We find solutions and help communities adapt to climate change through sponge city concepts, biodiversity, and resilience. 

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Our Solutions and Services

WHAT YOU GET

Early action enables smarter investment.  

  • You gain technical depth in planning and consulting.
  • You benefit from decades of experience and implementation skills.
  • Our concepts anticipate construction and operations.  
  • We co-create with collaborative workflows.
  • Teams scale to your needs and integrate partner support. 

Holistic Consulting for Urban Transformation and Infrastructure

We understand cities, neighborhoods, campuses, infrastructure, and buildings systematically. Industries, the public sector, and the real estate industry are shifting toward a new economy. Smart cities are developing. Meanwhile, climate, mobility, and energy transitions reshape demographics.

We know complex, intertwined systems require an interdisciplinary approach.
 

Our Approach is Multidimensional

Various factors influence our environment:

  • Energy

     

    How do we generate, transport, and store energy efficiently? How can we consume less by using efficient technologies? How do we ensure economic efficiency and stability? Where should energy plants be built? 

     

  • Water

     

    Heavy rainfall and drought force sustainable infrastructure and sponge city principles. How do we cut drinking water use, harvest rain, and protect against extremes? 

     

  • Climate

     

    How can we slow global warming? How is architecture part of the solution? How do we turn a carbon footprint into a “beneficial footprint”? 

     

  • Icon: Waste, Resources

    Waste and Resources

     

    How do we use resources responsibly? How do we save space, use eco-friendly materials, and close cycles with Cradle to Cradle®? 

     

  • Mobility

     

    How do we seamlessly connect different modes of transport? Where do we build infrastructure for electric and hydrogen mobility? 

     

  • Urban Structures and Real Estate

     

    Which criteria shape city planning? How do we transform existing buildings? What future challenges lie ahead – from green facades to solar roofs? 

     

  • Biodiversity

     

    How do we balance people and nature? How do we bring biodiversity into cities? Do we need Edible Cities while bees decline? 

     

  • Digitization

     

    Neighborhoods, buildings, rooms, and even objects join the “Internet of Things,” creating new business models. How do we connect everyday items with large-scale structures?  

     

  • Finances

     

    Which funding is available? What do green bonds require? How do we ensure economic, realistic development? 

     

  • Society

     

    How will urban life change? Will drones replace malls? Will offices disappear, or will hybrid work shape the future? 

     

We Consider All Dimensions

Graph: Urban and Infrastructure Solutions, Stressors
  • Data connection  
  • Smart networking  
  • Neighborhood apps  
  • Safe City  
  • Economic efficiency  
  • Green bond  
  • Subsidies  
  • CO₂ tax  
  • New business models  
  • Sponge city principles  
  • Environmental risk analysis  
  • Blue-green infrastructure  
  • Reducing drinking water usage 
  • Conversion  
  • Transport  
  • Storage  
  • Savings  
  • High-tech/ low-tech requirements
  • Efficiency  
  • Sufficiency
  • Cradle to Cradle®  
  • Climate change
  • Minimize carbon emissions  
  • Climate-friendly construction
  • Microclimate simulation  
  • New mobility  
  • Mobility concepts
  • City logistics  
  • Smart charging 
  • Demographic change/ structural change  
  • Social structures/ education  
  • Quality of life
  • Working world and shopping behavior  
  • Public participation 
  • Urban farming  
  • Animal-aided design  
  • Open space concept 

 

  • Development/ technical master plan  
  • Planning and construction  
  • (Re)using/ lifespan  
  • Building and neighborhood certification  
  • Density  
  • Height development  
  • Building types  
  • Building orientation  
  • Certification/ ESG
  • Certification of existing neighborhoods
  • Pre-check of existing buildings in neighborhoods 

WATER – A VITAL RESOURCE FOR A LIVABLE FUTURE

How we manage water as a resource is crucial to the resilience of our cities and communities. Whether industrial water, sustainable water management, or the sponge-city concept – our interdisciplinary teams work with you to develop holistic solutions that are technically sound, forwardthinking, and economically viable.

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Due Diligence for Industrial Sites

Energy and climate crises, material shortages, and changes in production are challenging real estate management. We provide answers and solutions so you can make informed real estate choices.

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Smart Charging – Expanding Charging Infrastructure

The future of e-mobility lies in smart charging. We deliver all-in-one: smart charging, charging stations, wall boxes, smart grids, and digitalization. Our holistic approach enables truly sustainable mobility.

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Car, Smart Charging

Accelerate Urban Transformation Across Europe

Economists and society are facing major challenges: Climate change, biodiversity loss, fragile supply chains, skills shortages, and demographic shifts challenge cities and businesses. We pair comprehensive consulting with a strong network to set projects up for success.

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Brownfield Development

Brownfields are more than abandoned land. Revitalizing industrial or conversion sites such former military bases, railyards, and port facilities goes beyond basic urban planning. In an era defined by land scarcity and rigorous ESG demands, it is a powerful economic lever.

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ReferencesThese projects may interest you.
Press

Limburg‘s Green Backbone: the Paradies Greenway as a Strategy for Climate Change Adaption and Quality for Life

Limburg‘s Green Backbone will become a climate-resilient link between the city center and the southern district – a space for movement, encounters, and biodiversity. © Drees & Sommer

Limburg a. d. Lahn, Germany, October XX, 2025. Flooded basements after heavy rains; parched ground during hot summers: the climate crisis is presenting cities and towns with new challenges – Limburg an der Lahn is one of them. In view of increasing periods of heat, heavy rainfall and the progressive loss of biodiversity, the city in the German federal state of Hesse, is developing a comprehensive plan for the use and design of the central Paradies greenway. The vision: around two kilometers long, the greenway between the city center and the southern part of the city is to become a district park that defies climate change, promotes social inclusion and participation in society, and is ecologically valuable. The experts from Drees & Sommer SE support the city administration with their expertise. The Stuttgart-headquartered consulting firm specializes in the fields of construction, real estate and infrastructure.

A Green Backbone for the Southern Part of the City

The Paradies greenway extends from the Stephanshuegel hill to the Sigi Wolf Park, along the Grossbach stream. The greenway links the city center with the southern part of Limburg. It is already used by a lot of people as access paths, footpaths or place for local recreation and relaxation. Yet despite its climatic importance as a fresh air corridor and its location in the heart of the south of Limburg, much of its potential remains untapped. Perceived unattractiveness for leisure time use, inadequate lighting and incomplete access options restrict the use of the area.
The new plan aims to upgrade the Paradies park as the green backbone of the southern part of the city. Not only will it connect downtown to the neighborhoods in the south of the city, but the new plan also aims to upgrade the park as a space for personal interaction, movement and biodiversity. “We intend to turn the greenway into a truly distinguishing space, an area with its own identity. It is not only about adaptation to climate change, but also about local mobility options, biodiversity, and social inclusion and participation to society,” said Katrin Keil, who heads the project at Drees & Sommer.

Climate Change Adaptation Meets Urban Design

At the heart of the proposal is the idea of developing the Paradies greenway as a climate-active and socially effective space. Greening at specific locations, the rewilding of the Grossbach stream and new retention areas should help to cool the city and improve rainwater management in future. Biodiversity will be increased as well: wildflower meadows, meadow orchards and close-to-nature plantings create habitats for insects, birds and small mammals. A possible ‘knowledge trail’ along the park should make ecological connections visible and provide environmental education in everyday life.

However, the concept goes far beyond ecological aspects. It sees public space as a stage for urban life, as a place where everyday life, personal interaction and movement come together. The greenway will play a key role in connecting the southern part of the city with the city center. A new main route for pedestrians and cyclists as well as additional side paths will improve accessibility and provide better links to the adjacent neighborhoods. Aids to crossing the pathways and a consistent path guidance system ensure orientation and safety. The greenway will be used by pedestrians and cyclists every day – and thus help to promote sustainable mobility between the urban districts.

A Public Movement and Social Interaction Space for Everyone

In addition to the ecological and infrastructure measures, the focus is also on the social and design quality of the greenway. The new district park is to be an inclusive place, open to all, regardless of age, origin or mobility. A range of recreational areas will be created along the paths. A reading garden is an invitation to linger – as the main meeting point and heart of the park – and covered seating areas will offer shelter in all weathers. 

In addition, health promotion facilities will be created as an incentive for exercise in everyday life. This makes the greenway not only a green retreat, but also an active space for leisure, health promotion and social interaction.

Citizen Participation as a Key to Success

A core element of the project is the active involvement of citizens at an early stage. In September 2025, the citizen participation initiative Markt im Park (‘market in the park’) enabled around 60 residents, passers-by and interested parties to contribute their ideas, wishes and points of criticism. Over 70 favorite locations were collected in several stages, as well as contentious areas and respondents’ wishes. The initiative was supplemented by questionnaires, an online survey, and a campaign in which schoolchildren participated, who creatively contributed their viewpoints on the greenway.

The feedback was broad and varied. While some praised the close-to-nature design and peaceful atmosphere, others criticized the lack of seating, unclear pathways and dark areas without lighting, which caused anxiety in the evening. The desire for a better quality of user experience, exercise facilities for all age groups, better maintenance of green areas and a clearer separation of pedestrian and cyclist routes were mentioned particularly often.

“The participation of the public in the initiative has shown how important the greenway is for local people, as an everyday path, a retreat and a social meeting point,“ explained Mauriz Porsche, Junior Consultant at Drees & Sommer. “These perspectives have been directly integrated into our planning and will help us develop a plan that is not just functional but a lively concept, close to the people’s needs.“

Katrin Keil added: “The citizens’ feedback is a crucial element of the process. It indicates how firmly the greenway is already anchored in everyday life and how great community interest in its development is.“

A Far-Sighted Project

The Paradies greenway is part of the Social Cohesion program and a key issue of the integrated urban development plan of the city of Limburg. The plan is scheduled for completion in spring 2026. Once the design phase has been completed, the city administration can apply for funding specifically to implement each of the measures, such as from programs for climate change adaptation, sustainable mobility solutions or green infrastructure.

Let's talk!

We’re happy to help. 

Gregor Grassl
Associate Partner

Leonardo Estrada
Associate Partner

Mustafa Kösebay
Associate Partner

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