A collaborative network where cities, community organisations, researchers, and practitioners work together to embed citizen-powered science in urban governance.
Working Group 1
Focuses on how public authorities can embrace citizen-powered science as a trusted part of urban governance. Across Europe, cities are increasingly recognising that community-generated data can enrich decision-making on urban greening, climate adaptation, and nature restoration. Yet integrating this data into formal processes remains a challenge.
WG1 was created to address this gap. The group brings together municipal officers, policymakers, researchers, and practitioners to explore what it takes for public institutions to move beyond pilot projects and embed citizen science into everyday practice. Its aim is to co-develop practical governance models that support inclusive, data-driven urban greening. Within Urban ReLeaf, WG1 ensures that the project’s governance outputs are grounded in real-world institutional realities and co-owned by those who will ultimately use them.

WG1 is led by ICLEI Europe, drawing on its extensive network of local governments committed to sustainability and resilience. The group includes representatives from Urban ReLeaf pilot cities, civil society organisations, and research partners.
The group works through a combination of online meetings, thematic workshops, and in-person forums. Sessions have explored topics such as institutional capacity, data legitimacy, and the alignment of citizen science with regulatory frameworks like the EU Nature Restoration Law. A collaborative and iterative approach ensures that insights from practitioners directly shape the development of governance models and tools.

Since its launch in 2023, WG1 has convened regularly to share experiences and co-create solutions. Key activities include:
Working Group 2
Working Group 2 (WG2) focuses on the powerful synergy between citizen-generated data and Earth Observation (EO) technologies. While satellites and remote sensing provide valuable large-scale environmental data, they often miss the ground-level, contextual detail that communities experience daily. Citizen science fills this gap, offering local, high-resolution insights on urban greening, air quality, biodiversity, and climate impacts.
WG2 brings together urban practitioners, EO specialists, citizen science practitioners, and researchers to explore how these two data sources can be integrated effectively. Its aim is to develop practical approaches for combining community observations with satellite data to support environmental monitoring, policy reporting, and urban planning. Within Urban ReLeaf, WG2 ensures that the project’s data integration methods are robust, scalable, and aligned with European and global frameworks, including the European Green Deal and UN Sustainable Development Goal 11 (Sustainable Cities and Communities).

WG2 is led by the International Institute for Applied Systems Analysis (IIASA), which brings deep expertise in Earth Observation, data science, and citizen science methodologies. The group includes representatives from Urban ReLeaf pilot cities, research institutions, and technical partners, as well as external experts who have joined through the project’s Community of Practice.
The group works through a combination of online meetings, technical workshops, and collaborative research activities. A key focus has been on interoperability, ensuring that citizen-generated data can be meaningfully combined with EO datasets and municipal information systems. WG2 also engages with international partners to align its work with global monitoring frameworks.
A notable collaboration took place between November and December 2024, when WG2 partnered with UN-Habitat to explore how citizen science can support the Global Urban Monitoring Framework. This work focused on aligning indicators across SDG 11, the New Urban Agenda, and the City Prosperity Index, strengthening the evidence base for community-based data in urban monitoring.

Since its launch, WG2 has advanced the integration of citizen science and Earth Observation through a range of activities:
Working Group 3
This working group brings together a diverse network of stakeholders to advance how cities work with futures to drive “grey-to-green [and blue]” transitions.
With over 210 registered members spanning public authorities, community organisations, private sector actors, researchers, and civil society, the CoP aims to strengthen shared understanding and practical application of scenario planning and foresight approaches.
Its core objective is to support more inclusive, evidence-informed, and forward-looking urban design processes by integrating diverse forms of knowledge, including citizen knowledge, environmental data, and participatory methods.
This work is central to Urban ReLeaf’s mission, addressing the need for more just, locally grounded, and actionable pathways for urban climate adaptation and resilience, albeit with a future focused lens.

Led by the University of Dundee, the working group operates through a combination of in-person workshops, online events, and collaborative research activities. Its approach emphasises knowledge exchange across disciplines and sectors, fostering dialogue between practitioners, policymakers, researchers, and citizens.
Activities are designed to be interactive and participatory, often using formats such as world cafés, webinars, and co-production workshops to surface diverse perspectives and build a shared vocabulary and tools. The CoP also plays a key role in identifying knowledge gaps and shaping research priorities, ensuring that its work remains responsive to both practice and policy needs across different European contexts.

Since its launch in 2023, WG3 has convened regularly to share experiences and co-create solutions. Key activities include: