A New Approach to Drive Change

Assessing impact with data

Harmony reaching four dimensions

When health goes beyond individuals

At HARMONIE, we introduce a new approach to assess impact with data. By combining high-resolution monitoring, advanced modelling, behavioural insights and Digital Twin technologies, we provide cities with tools beyond the state of the art to design more effective and fair zero-pollution policies.
Our impact will reach four dimensions:

Environmental

  • Real-time monitoring of air and noise pollution.
  • Identification of major sources and harmful pollutants.
  • Contribution to European goals such as the 100 Climate-Neutral and Smart Cities by 2030, the EU Climate Adaptation Strategy, the New European Bauhaus, and the UN Agenda 2030 (SDG 11).

Societal & Health

  • Better strategies to reduce exposure and improve quality of life.
  • Protection of vulnerable groups such as children, the elderly, and people with respiratory conditions.
  • Empowering citizens to take part in environmental policies and climate action.
  • Reducing inequalities to support fairer, healthier cities.

Economic

  • Reducing the burden on health systems and healthcare costs.
  • More efficient urban planning through forecasting tools.
  • Saving resources by avoiding trial-and-error policy approaches.

Knowledge & Policy

  • Developing new health indicators that reveal how harmful pollution really is, beyond simple concentration levels.
  • Stronger evidence-based decision-making for policymakers.
  • Transferable tools and methods that can be adapted to other European cities.

Environmental

  • Real-time monitoring of air and noise pollution.
  • Identification of major sources and harmful pollutants.
  • Contribution to European goals such as the 100 Climate-Neutral and Smart Cities by 2030, the EU Climate Adaptation Strategy, the New European Bauhaus, and the UN Agenda 2030 (SDG 11).

Societal & Health

  • Better strategies to reduce exposure and improve quality of life.
  • Protection of vulnerable groups such as children, the elderly, and people with respiratory conditions.
  • Empowering citizens to take part in environmental policies and climate action.
  • Reducing inequalities to support fairer, healthier cities.

Economic

  • Reducing the burden on health systems and healthcare costs.
  • More efficient urban planning through forecasting tools.
  • Saving resources by avoiding trial-and-error policy approaches.

Knowledge & Policy

  • Developing new health indicators that reveal how harmful pollution really is, beyond simple concentration levels.
  • Stronger evidence-based decision-making for policymakers.
  • Transferable tools and methods that can be adapted to other European cities.