Challenge 2

Resilient Cities

Design smarter urban systems for a liveable future.

Cities are our future. More than half the world’s population already live in urban centres, and by 2050 70% of the 9.7 billion people projected to be living on the planet will call cities their home. [Reference: 2025 SDG report]

Cities are hubs for innovation and economic opportunity. Having so many people in close proximity gives rise to knowledge sharing, collaboration, creativity and dynamic interactions; unlocking the development of diverse services, markets, and enterprise. At the same time, this concentration of people means that events affecting a city can have dire consequences for millions. Supporting cities to become resilient enables them to protect and nurture the people that live there.

The Challenge

Can you think about what’s needed in a city for people to thrive? Explore how that might be threatened by existing and projected stresses and shocks and propose engineering solutions for cities to become more resilient.

Engineering responses to advance UNSDG 12

Engineering can play a critical role in developing sustainable cities including how energy, water, transport, housing and infrastructure can be designed, developed and maintained sustainably.

Information technology engineers, computer scientists, and other disciplines can be engaged in developing digital models of city infrastructure systems and digital twins that can support the planning and development of sustainable cities.

Civil engineers can design water supply and treatment systems including water recycling for responsible resource management and sustainable water use.

Electrical and mechanical engineers can design and build sustainable energy supply systems, critical for a modern city.

Civil, mechanical and materials engineers can design and develop sustainable infrastructure including whole of life approaches to these critical assets, including design, material selection and maintenance.

Chemical and environmental engineers can design and develop water and waste management systems and minimise impact on the environment by reducing pollution and waste.

Make sure your engineering solutions are innovative and consistent with the theme of World Engineering Day 2026: Smart Engineering for a sustainable future through innovation and digitalisation.

Innovation Examples

Some examples of engineering innovations that are addressing challenges related to sustainable cities.

Resilient infrastructure
  • Lisbon City Digital Twin for Flood resilience, has enabled planning for a resilient and sustainable city.
  • The “Sponge City” programme, China (Absorption of rainwater). City planning approach that uses wetlands, permeable pavements, natural drainage to absorb rainwater, reducing flood risk, recharging ground water supplies, and reducing stormwater management costs.
  • The Cheonggyecheon River Restoration, Seoul, South Korea (removal of an elevated highway to restore a natural stream). Lowers local temperatures by 2–3 degrees celcius during heatwaves and reduces small-particle air pollution by 35 per cent. Creates biodiversity corridors and provides public cooling space during extreme heat events.
  • Bosco Verticale, Milan, Italy (green residential towers). 800 trees, 4,500 shrubs and 20,000 plants are hosted on two residential towers, the equivalent of five hectares of flat parkland concentrated on 1,000 square meters (50x less). Supporting carbon dioxide absorption, oxygen production, water management.
  • Brooklyn Microgrid, New York, USA (a neighbourhood-scale, peer-to-peer renewable energy trading system). A blockchain-based virtual microgrid for clean energy. Residents can still access local power during grid failures. Encourages adoption of rooftop solar. Builds community energy independence.
  • Virtual twin Singapore (a 3D digital twin of the entire city-state). Used for planning, heat modelling, utilities use (e.g. energy use) civil protection, and emergency response planning.
  • The Edge, Amsterdam, Netherlands (one of the most intelligent office buildings in the world). Uses sensor networks to optimise energy, airflow, lighting and space, in particular adapting the building dynamically during heatwaves or peak energy usage events.
Sensing, monitoring and tracking
  • AirQo (low-cost air quality sensors) Deploys a network of sensors in African cities (200+ sensors across 16+ cities) to generate hyper-local, real-time air quality data, with dashboards, developer APIs, and community engagement.
  • sensors.AFRICA (low-cost environmental sensors) An emerging citizen-science initiative that uses low-cost sensors (for air, water, sound pollution) to empower citizens with actionable data about their environment.
  • BKwai (asset movement sensing) A geospatial analytics platform providing insights and alerts on asset movement informing maintenance and inspection schedules to ensure the long-term safety of infrastructure assets.
Reducing pollutants and managing waste
  • Eco-Tri Sénégal (Addresses waste mismanagement reducing environmental pollution and urban health risks). Offer home garbage-collection services in Senegal, promote selective sorting (households), reduce illegal dumping and open-air incineration, and improve waste-routing systems.
  • Qflow (real time construction site insights) real-time data capture on materials, waste, utilities and carbon directly from site helping teams ensure quality, reduce risk, minimise waste and avoid costly rework or delays.
Early warning systems and disaster preparedness
  • Community-based early warning system (early flood warning system in Rio de Janeiro) real-time monitoring, “nowcasting” technology, and emergency protocols to provide advance warnings before flood events.
  • M-Situ AI (AI-powered early-warning systems to conserve the environment) uses artificial intelligence and satellite imagery as an early warning system to detect deforestation, wildfires and illegal charcoal burning in Kenyan forests.
  • Lumkani (Tackles an acute urban hazard (fire) in vulnerable settlements where infrastructure is weak). Provides a networked heat-detector IoT system for informal settlements (shacks) in South Africa and Kenya.

Deep Dive

Further Information on Challenge 2

Resilient cities are cities where the “city’s systems, businesses, institutions, communities, and individuals [can] survive, adapt, and thrive, no matter what chronic stresses and acute shocks they experience” [Reference: Resilient Cities Network]. Chronic stresses are events that weaken a city over time. Examples include rapid urbanisation, ageing infrastructure, unemployment, inequality and poverty, and climate change. Acute shocks are intense events that happen suddenly. Examples include natural disasters, extreme weather events, terrorist attacks, cyber attacks and system disruptions. Cities often face a combination of acute shocks and chronic stresses, with vulnerabilities created by chronic stresses exacerbating the impacts of acute shocks when they happen.

Engineering has a prime role in the resilience of a city. Ensuring cities are robust enough to survive acute shocks, can evolve with changing circumstances, and still support people to thrive in their day to day lives means thinking about integrated, future-proofed, and risk-aware city systems that are inclusive, adaptable and sustainable. Opportunities to build new cities with resilient city systems ‘from scratch’ exist, but in many cases city infrastructure already dates back hundreds of years and in other cases urban growth is outpacing city capacity to plan, design and manage that growth effectively leading to marginalised and vulnerable populations. As well as finding new ways to improve existing city infrastructure, smart solutions are needed that can integrate into the cities of today to create better cities tomorrow. New digital technologies are delivering sensor networks, real-time management systems, digital twins and predictive modelling, and early-warning disaster response systems - already upgrading the resilience of our cities all around the world.

Key issues

Cities are challenged by a number of issues. This list is not exhaustive and we encourage you to explore further.

Rapid population growth and urbanisation:

  • An additional 2.5 billion people are projected to live in cities between now and 2050, a rapid increase placing extreme pressure on existing city infrastructure. [Reference: UN Department of Economic and Social Affairs]
  • 90 per cent of all population growth is taking place in lower income regions, with the infrastructure yet to be built. This poses significant challenges due to resource constraints and limited governance capacity, but also offers the possibility to build more sustainably and inclusively. [Reference: World Cities Report 2024].

Climate change and disaster exposure:

  • Although cities occupy a small percentage of Earth’s land surface and are home to half the global population, they consume about 60-80 per cent of global energy and are responsible for 75 per cent of carbon emissions. [Reference: Economist Impact article]. Yet they are uniquely able to reduce carbon emissions; e.g. the concentration of people unlocks sustainable mobility options such as the “15 minute city”.
  • Cities are projected to become hotter in future, with a significant proportion becoming either more arid, or more humid. At least 600 cities could become drier by 2040, and at least 900 cities will become more humid [Reference: World Cities Report 2024]. Extreme heat is also an issue with more than 970 cities projected to experience average summertime highs of 35 degrees Celsius / 95 degrees Fahrenheit by 2050 putting millions, in particular the very young and the very old, at risk.
  • More than two thirds of the world’s largest cities are coastal delta cities vulnerable to rising sea levels as a result of the climate crisis, exposing millions of people to the risk of extreme flooding and storms, leading to damaged infrastructure, polluted water systems, and the potential loss of homes and livelihoods. Riverine flood risks are also escalating. In 2025, 1 billion people live in areas prone to severe riverine flooding, half of them in cities [Reference: 2025 SDG report]. In particular, informal settlements are often on the most at-risk land putting those experiencing poverty at greatest risk.

Housing affordability:

  • Up to 3 billion people already struggle to afford a place to live, and 1.12 billion live in slums or informal settlements without basic services [Reference: 2025 SDG report]. This situation results in vulnerable living conditions where residents face higher risks of eviction, discrimination, violence and social exclusion. In addition, the absence of secure tenure exacerbates poverty levels and limits residents’ ability to invest in their homes and communities.
  • This inequality results in populations vulnerable to the impacts of extreme weather events and other acute shocks.

Waste and service coverage:

  • Managing the waste of rapidly growing populations has become a critical challenge. Overall, 2.7 billion people do not have their waste collected, 700 million of them in urban areas [Reference: UNEP Global Waste Management Outlook 2024]. This impacts on people’s health and wellbeing, pollutes the natural environment and can cause infrastructure damage and system disruption, for example when floods carry waste resulting in blocked water systems and roads.

Ageing infrastructure:

  • Ageing infrastructure is a widespread issue in most major cities worldwide, impacting everything from roads and bridges, to energy and water systems, and public buildings. This creates safety concerns, undermines city resilience, and if allowed to persist can lead to irreparable damage and significant recovery costs.

Loss of green / open space:

  • The last 30 years have seen a decline in green spaces in urban areas, with implications for resilience to heat and flooding, biodiversity loss, and human health and wellbeing [Reference: World Cities Report 2024].