View Categories

Reference Guide Part 2 – Roadmap

16 min read

AI Doc Summarizer Doc Summary

Introductory Remarks #

This document is a Section 2 of the BeCom Reference Guide, and it presents the Roadmap – a practical, structured pathway for fostering knowledge creation and sustainable transformation within communities. Building on the foundations established in the guide’s opening section, this part operationalizes the BeCom project’s vision by translating its core principles into actionable steps across real-world pilots.

The roadmap leverages the Quintuple Helix Model (QHM), which integrates five societal domains—education, politics, society, economy, and the natural environment—to ensure a holistic approach to community innovation. Each domain is addressed through targeted objectives, tasks, deliverables, and evaluation criteria, ensuring that strategies are both comprehensive and adaptable to local contexts.

A defining feature of the roadmap is its alignment with the New European Bauhaus (NEB) principles: sustainability, aesthetics, and inclusion. These values are embedded throughout, guiding the design and implementation of pilots in circular economy, Green building, and community gardening. Each pilot serves as an anchor for knowledge creation, demonstrating how cross-sector collaboration and community engagement can drive systemic change.

The section details concrete actions for each helix, from policy co-creation and educational curriculum development to startup incubation, community empowerment, and ecological regeneration. It also outlines mechanisms for network formation, digital learning, and continuous evaluation, ensuring that the roadmap is dynamic and responsive to evolving needs.

Figure 1 Roadmap Model

Knowledge Creation

Phase 2

Evaluation

Phase 4

START

Stakeholder Mobilisation

Phase 1

Pilot Networks

Phase 3

Scaling

Phase 5

Roadmap and Action Plan for Knowledge Creation Across the Quintuple Helix Model (QHM) Using Circular Economy Practices #

Case Anchor: Circular Economy Pilot #


Utilize a community-level example of circular economy implementation (e.g., local material reuse hubs, zero-waste districts) as a central knowledge driver.

Integration with New European Bauhaus (NEB) Principles:

  • Sustainability: Prioritize reuse, recycling, zero waste, and regenerative systems.
  • Aesthetics: Encourage functional and beautiful designs using upcycled or sustainable materials.
  • Inclusion: Ensure all demographics can access and benefit from circular economy initiatives.

Table 1 Roadmap Overview

Phase

Description

Timeline

Phase 1

Stakeholder Mobilization & Visioning

Months 1–3

Phase 2

Knowledge Creation & Cross-Helix Integration

Months 4–9

Phase 3

Pilot Innovation Networks

Months 10–15

Phase 4

Evaluation & Policy Alignment

Months 16–18

Phase 5

Replication & Scaling

Months 19–24

1. Political System (Governance)

Objective: Enable policy frameworks that support local circular economy ecosystems.

Tasks:

  • Task 1.1: Policy Landscape Mapping

    • Steps: Audit existing policies

    • Actions: Identify regulatory gaps and enablers

    • Deliverables: Circular economy policy map

    • Outputs: Policy framework reports
  • Task 1.2: Circular Policy Co-Creation

    • Steps: Engage stakeholders in roundtables

    • Actions: Draft local ordinances supporting reuse, repair, sharing economy

    • Deliverables: Model policies and advocacy documents

    • Outputs: Inclusive, enabling policy environment

Evaluation Criteria: Number of supportive policies enacted; regulatory changes

2. Education System (Universities, R&D)

Objective: Cultivate knowledge and skills for circular design and systems thinking.

Tasks:

  • Task 2.1: Circular Curriculum Development

    • Steps: Co-develop modules with educators and practitioners

    • Actions: Embed sustainability, aesthetics, and inclusion into educational content

    • Deliverables: Open-source learning materials

    • Outputs: Informed student body
  • Task 2.2: Applied Research & Innovation Labs

    • Steps: Launch university-industry-community labs

    • Actions: Test circular product life cycles, materials, and services

    • Deliverables: Research reports, prototypes

    • Outputs: Data-informed innovation

Evaluation Criteria: Curricula integrated; research publications and prototypes developed

3. Economic System (Business & Industry)

Objective: Promote business models rooted in reuse, sharing, and material cycles.

Tasks:

  • Task 3.1: Circular Startup Incubation

    • Steps: Identify entrepreneurs and opportunities

    • Actions: Provide seed funding and mentorship

    • Deliverables: Circular business plans and MVPs

    • Outputs: Local job creation and circular services
  • Task 3.2: Supply Chain Redesign for Circularity

    • Steps: Map material flows

    • Actions: Redesign processes for closed loops

    • Deliverables: Case studies, new operational models

    • Outputs: Waste reduction, efficiency gains

Evaluation Criteria: Number of circular enterprises; material recovery rates

4. Civil Society (Community & Social Actors)

Objective: Engage residents in co-creation and behaviour change toward circular living.

Tasks:

  • Task 4.1: Zero-Waste Community Hubs

    • Steps: Identify local champions

    • Actions: Co-create sharing libraries, repair cafés

    • Deliverables: Community-run hubs

    • Outputs: Behavioural shifts and waste reduction
  • Task 4.2: Inclusion-Focused Campaigns

    • Steps: Host storytelling events

    • Actions: Engage marginalized groups in upcycling workshops, public art

    • Deliverables: Community narratives and creative outputs

    • Outputs: Culturally inclusive participation

Evaluation Criteria: Community engagement rates; inclusive reach of campaigns

5. Natural Environment (Sustainability)

Objective: Reduce ecological footprint through regenerative, closed-loop systems.

Tasks:

  • Task 5.1: Waste Stream Redirection

    • Steps: Conduct material audits

    • Actions: Divert waste through composting, recycling, reuse

    • Deliverables: Urban metabolism dashboards

    • Outputs: Decreased landfill contribution
  • Task 5.2: Nature-Based Solutions & Design

    • Steps: Implement biophilic and eco-design principles

    • Actions: Integrate living walls, water-saving systems, nature loops

    • Deliverables: Design templates and blueprints

    • Outputs: Visibly green, climate-resilient spaces

Evaluation Criteria: Waste diverted; ecosystem services enhanced

Community-Based QHM Actors & Innovation Networks #

Table 2 Roles and Contributions:

Helix

Actor Example

Role

Political

City Planners

Enable circular-friendly urban policy

Education

Eco-Design Academics

Generate system insights

Economic

Social Enterprises

Offer reuse/repair/upcycle services

Social

Community Cooperatives

Anchor inclusion and behavioral engagement

Environment

Circular Ecologists

Ensure ecological integrity and knowledge flows

Innovation Network Formation Steps:


  1. Create inter-helix working groups

  2. Launch neighbourhood-scale circular pilot projects

  3. Share real-time data and success stories

  4. Establish mutual learning platforms and toolkits

  5. Formalize partnerships with feedback loops

  6. Scale through NEB-aligned city initiatives

Roadmap and Action Plan for Knowledge Creation Across the Quintuple Helix Model (QHM) Using Green building Practices #

Case Anchor: Green building Pilot #


Utilize a real or modelled example of a successful Green building (e.g., energy-positive community centre) as a central knowledge generator.

Table 3 Roadmap Overview

Phase

Description

Timeline

Phase 1

Stakeholder Mobilization & Visioning

Months 1–3

Phase 2

Knowledge Creation & Cross-Helix Integration

Months 4–9

Phase 3

Pilot Innovation Networks

Months 10–15

Phase 4

Evaluation & Policy Alignment

Months 16–18

Phase 5

Replication & Scaling

Months 19–24

1. Political System (Governance)

Objective: Align policy frameworks with sustainability through green buildings.

Tasks:

  • Task 1.1: Stakeholder Mapping & Policy Audit

    • Steps: Identify stakeholders, conduct policy review

    • Actions: Interviews, data collection

    • Deliverables: Stakeholder map, gap analysis

    • Outputs: Strategic alignment document
  • Task 1.2: Policy Co-Creation Workshops

    • Steps: Host participatory events

    • Actions: Draft sustainable policy proposals

    • Deliverables: Policy drafts

    • Outputs: Improved governance model

Evaluation Criteria: Number of policies influenced; engagement rate

2. Education System (Universities, R&D)

Objective: Disseminate Green building knowledge through education and research.

Tasks:

  • Task 2.1: Curriculum Integration

    • Steps: Partner with educators

    • Actions: Develop sustainability modules

    • Deliverables: Curriculum toolkit

    • Outputs: Teaching materials
  • Task 2.2: Research & Innovation Labs

    • Steps: Establish living labs

    • Actions: Conduct joint studies

    • Deliverables: Case studies, prototypes

    • Outputs: Innovation hubs

Evaluation Criteria: Number of participants; research output

3. Economic System (Business & Industry)

Objective: Stimulate green entrepreneurship.

Tasks:

  • Task 3.1: Innovation Incubators

    • Steps: Set up incubators

    • Actions: Support startups

    • Deliverables: Business models

    • Outputs: Green SME ecosystem
  • Task 3.2: Procurement & Incentives

    • Steps: Develop supply chain links

    • Actions: Policy alignment with economic goals

    • Deliverables: Incentive frameworks

    • Outputs: Stimulated local economy

Evaluation Criteria: Number of businesses supported; investment generated

4. Civil Society (Community & Social Actors)

Objective: Empower communities in innovation processes.

Tasks:

  • Task 4.1: Citizen Science & Co-Design

    • Steps: Facilitate workshops

    • Actions: Community prototyping

    • Deliverables: Co-designed models

    • Outputs: Innovation from the ground up
  • Task 4.2: Public Awareness Campaigns

    • Steps: Design campaigns

    • Actions: Disseminate success stories

    • Deliverables: Media outputs

    • Outputs: Increased environmental literacy

Evaluation Criteria: Participation rates; public perception

5. Natural Environment (Sustainability)

Objective: Ensure eco-alignment and resilience.

Tasks:

  • Task 5.1: Environmental Monitoring

    • Steps: Install monitoring tools

    • Actions: Collect and analyse data

    • Deliverables: Environmental reports

    • Outputs: Sustainability dashboard
  • Task 5.2: Nature-Based Integration

    • Steps: Implement green design features

    • Actions: Evaluate ecological outcomes

    • Deliverables: Biodiversity index, design guides

    • Outputs: Resilient infrastructure

Evaluation Criteria: Biodiversity metrics; carbon reduction

Community-Based QHM Actors & Innovation Networks #

Table 4 Role in Network Formation:

Helix

Actor Example

Role

Political

City Councils

Set enabling policies

Education

Universities

Create and share knowledge

Economic

SMEs

Develop market solutions

Social

NGOs

Represent community needs

Environment

Planners

Integrate nature in planning

Network Formation Steps:


  1. Map stakeholders

  2. Identify shared goals

  3. Host multi-helix roundtables

  4. Launch digital platforms

  5. Run living lab pilots

  6. Document and replicate

Roadmap and Action Plan for Knowledge Creation Across the Quintuple Helix Model (QHM) Using Community Gardening Practices #

Case Anchor: Community Gardening Pilot #


Utilize a real or modelled example of a community gardening initiative (e.g., co-managed urban food forest) as a central knowledge generator.

Integration with New European Bauhaus (NEB) Principles:

  • Sustainability: Emphasize regenerative urban greening, soil health, and biodiversity.
  • Aesthetics: Use inclusive and beautiful garden design principles.
  • Inclusion: Ensure participation across diverse community groups.

Table 5 Roadmap Overview

Phase

Description

Timeline

Phase 1

Stakeholder Mobilization & Visioning

Months 1–3

Phase 2

Knowledge Creation & Cross-Helix Integration

Months 4–9

Phase 3

Pilot Innovation Networks

Months 10–15

Phase 4

Evaluation & Policy Alignment

Months 16–18

Phase 5

Replication & Scaling

Months 19–24

1. Political System (Governance)

Objective: Align local policies and zoning regulations to support community gardens.

Tasks:

  • Task 1.1: Urban Policy Review & Advocacy

    • Steps: Map policy barriers

    • Actions: Organize multi-stakeholder policy forums

    • Deliverables: Urban greening policy recommendations

    • Outputs: Improved land-use governance
  • Task 1.2: Participatory Policy Design

    • Steps: Conduct design thinking workshops

    • Actions: Co-create garden-friendly policies with communities

    • Deliverables: Policy drafts

    • Outputs: Governance aligned with NEB values

Evaluation Criteria: Number of gardens permitted; policy amendments achieved

2. Education System (Universities, R&D)

Objective: Embed community gardening in curricula and knowledge-sharing systems.

Tasks:

  • Task 2.1: School & University Garden Programs

    • Steps: Develop gardening modules

    • Actions: Train educators and students

    • Deliverables: NEB-aligned curricula

    • Outputs: Experiential learning sites
  • Task 2.2: Research Partnerships on Urban Ecology

    • Steps: Form university-community teams

    • Actions: Study environmental, social, aesthetic impacts

    • Deliverables: Scientific publications, garden data dashboards

    • Outputs: Evidence-based practice

Evaluation Criteria: Research output; educational participation rates

3. Economic System (Business & Industry)

Objective: Foster green micro-economies through community gardening.

Tasks:

  • Task 3.1: Garden-Based Enterprises

    • Steps: Identify viable micro-enterprises (e.g., composting, herbs)

    • Actions: Support business development

    • Deliverables: Product prototypes, value chains

    • Outputs: Local green job creation
  • Task 3.2: Circular Economy Integration

    • Steps: Close nutrient loops

    • Actions: Set up composting and food-sharing systems

    • Deliverables: Circular models

    • Outputs: Reduced waste, economic resilience

Evaluation Criteria: Number of supported micro-enterprises; circular systems deployed

4. Civil Society (Community & Social Actors)

Objective: Empower inclusive community action and intercultural gardening.

Tasks:

  • Task 4.1: Community Co-Design of Gardens

    • Steps: Conduct inclusive planning sessions

    • Actions: Co-design with NEB principles

    • Deliverables: Co-created garden layouts

    • Outputs: Empowered neighbourhoods
  • Task 4.2: Cultural & Educational Programming

    • Steps: Curate events in gardens (e.g., art, food festivals)

    • Actions: Collaborate with local creatives

    • Deliverables: Cultural calendar

    • Outputs: Aesthetically vibrant, inclusive spaces

Evaluation Criteria: Diversity of participants; event impact and reach

5. Natural Environment (Sustainability)

Objective: Enhance ecological value and resilience of urban spaces.

Tasks:

  • Task 5.1: Soil & Biodiversity Regeneration

    • Steps: Soil testing and amendments

    • Actions: Native planting, permaculture design

    • Deliverables: Biodiversity index, soil improvement reports

    • Outputs: Living urban ecosystems
  • Task 5.2: Climate Resilience Features

    • Steps: Rainwater harvesting, green infrastructure

    • Actions: Implement shading, habitat corridors

    • Deliverables: Design templates, water usage logs

    • Outputs: Adaptation-ready neighbourhoods

Evaluation Criteria: Biodiversity levels; climate resilience indicators

Community-Based QHM Actors & Innovation Networks #

Table 6 Role in Network Formation:

Helix

Actor Example

Role

Political

Municipal Authorities

Enable access and legal frameworks

Education

Agroecology Programs

Knowledge co-creation

Economic

Green SMEs

Product and value creation

Social

Local Associations

Inclusion and outreach

Environment

Urban Ecologists

Guide regenerative practices

Network Formation Steps:


  1. Identify champions across helixes

  2. Convene inclusive co-design groups

  3. Establish community garden clusters

  4. Develop shared digital platforms

  5. Measure and visualize impact

  6. Replicate in other urban areas

Roadmap and Action Plan for Knowledge Creation Across the Quintuple Helix Model (QHM) Using: Green Buildings, Circular Economy and Community Gardening Practices #

Case Anchor

1. Political System (Governance)

2. Education System (Universities, R&D)

3. Economic System (Business & Industry)

4. Civil Society (Community & Social Actors)

5. Natural Environment (Sustainability)

Circular Economy Pilot

Utilize a community-level example of circular economy implementation (e.g., local material reuse hubs, zero-waste districts) as a central knowledge driver.

Objective: Enable policy frameworks that support local circular economy ecosystems.

Tasks:

Task 1.1: Policy Landscape Mapping

  • Steps: Audit existing policies
  • Actions: Identify regulatory gaps and enablers
  • Deliverables: Circular economy policy map
  • Outputs: Policy framework reports

Task 1.2: Circular Policy Co-Creation

  • Steps: Engage stakeholders in roundtables
  • Actions: Draft local ordinances supporting reuse, repair, sharing economy
  • Deliverables: Model policies and advocacy documents
  • Outputs: Inclusive, enabling policy environment

Evaluation Criteria: Number of supportive policies enacted; regulatory changes

Objective: Cultivate knowledge and skills for circular design and systems thinking.

Tasks:

Task 2.1: Circular Curriculum Development

  • Steps: Co-develop modules with educators and practitioners
  • Actions: Embed sustainability, aesthetics, and inclusion into educational content
  • Deliverables: Open-source learning materials
  • Outputs: Informed student body

Task 2.2: Applied Research & Innovation Labs

  • Steps: Launch university-industry-community labs
  • Actions: Test circular product life cycles, materials, and services
  • Deliverables: Research reports, prototypes
  • Outputs: Data-informed innovation

Evaluation Criteria: Curricula integrated; research publications and prototypes developed

Objective: Promote business models rooted in reuse, sharing, and material cycles.

Tasks:

Task 3.1: Circular Startup Incubation

  • Steps: Identify entrepreneurs and opportunities
  • Actions: Provide seed funding and mentorship
  • Deliverables: Circular business plans and MVPs
  • Outputs: Local job creation and circular services

Task 3.2: Supply Chain Redesign for Circularity

  • Steps: Map material flows
  • Actions: Redesign processes for closed loops
  • Deliverables: Case studies, new operational models
  • Outputs: Waste reduction, efficiency gains

Evaluation Criteria: Number of circular enterprises; material recovery rates

Objective: Engage residents in co-creation and behaviour change toward circular living.

Tasks:

Task 4.1: Zero-Waste Community Hubs

  • Steps: Identify local champions
  • Actions: Co-create sharing libraries, repair cafés
  • Deliverables: Community-run hubs
  • Outputs: Behavioural shifts and waste reduction

Task 4.2: Inclusion-Focused Campaigns

  • Steps: Host storytelling events
  • Actions: Engage marginalized groups in upcycling workshops, public art
  • Deliverables: Community narratives and creative outputs
  • Outputs: Culturally inclusive participation

Evaluation Criteria: Community engagement rates; inclusive reach of campaigns

Objective: Reduce ecological footprint through regenerative, closed-loop systems.

Tasks:

Task 5.1: Waste Stream Redirection

  • Steps: Conduct material audits
  • Actions: Divert waste through composting, recycling, reuse
  • Deliverables: Urban metabolism dashboards
  • Outputs: Decreased landfill contribution

Task 5.2: Nature-Based Solutions & Design

  • Steps: Implement biophilic and eco-design principles
  • Actions: Integrate living walls, water-saving systems, nature loops
  • Deliverables: Design templates and blueprints
  • Outputs: Visibly green, climate-resilient spaces

Evaluation Criteria: Waste diverted; ecosystem services enhanced

Community Gardening Pilot

Utilize a real or modeled example of a community gardening initiative (e.g., co-managed urban food forest) as a central knowledge generator.

Objective: Align local policies and zoning regulations to support community gardens.

Tasks:

Task 1.1: Urban Policy Review & Advocacy

  • Steps: Map policy barriers
  • Actions: Organize multi-stakeholder policy forums
  • Deliverables: Urban greening policy recommendations
  • Outputs: Improved land-use governance

Task 1.2: Participatory Policy Design

  • Steps: Conduct design thinking workshops
  • Actions: Co-create garden-friendly policies with communities
  • Deliverables: Policy drafts
  • Outputs: Governance aligned with NEB values

Evaluation Criteria: Number of gardens permitted; policy amendments achieved

Objective: Embed community gardening in curricula and knowledge-sharing systems.

Tasks:

Task 2.1: School & University Garden Programs

  • Steps: Develop gardening modules
  • Actions: Train educators and students
  • Deliverables: NEB-aligned curricula
  • Outputs: Experiential learning sites

Task 2.2: Research Partnerships on Urban Ecology

  • Steps: Form university-community teams
  • Actions: Study environmental, social, aesthetic impacts
  • Deliverables: Scientific publications, garden data dashboards
  • Outputs: Evidence-based practice

Evaluation Criteria: Research output; educational participation rates

Objective: Foster green micro-economies through community gardening.

Tasks:

Task 3.1: Garden-Based Enterprises

  • Steps: Identify viable micro-enterprises (e.g., composting, herbs)
  • Actions: Support business development
  • Deliverables: Product prototypes, value chains
  • Outputs: Local green job creation

Task 3.2: Circular Economy Integration

  • Steps: Close nutrient loops
  • Actions: Set up composting and food-sharing systems
  • Deliverables: Circular models
  • Outputs: Reduced waste, economic resilience

Evaluation Criteria: Number of supported micro-enterprises; circular systems deployed

Objective: Empower inclusive community action and intercultural gardening.

Tasks:

Task 4.1: Community Co-Design of Gardens

  • Steps: Conduct inclusive planning sessions
  • Actions: Co-design with NEB principles
  • Deliverables: Co-created garden layouts
  • Outputs: Empowered neighborhoods

Task 4.2: Cultural & Educational Programming

  • Steps: Curate events in gardens (e.g., art, food festivals)
  • Actions: Collaborate with local creatives
  • Deliverables: Cultural calendar
  • Outputs: Aesthetically vibrant, inclusive spaces

Evaluation Criteria: Diversity of participants; event impact and reach

Objective: Enhance ecological value and resilience of urban spaces.

Tasks:

Task 5.1: Soil & Biodiversity Regeneration

  • Steps: Soil testing and amendments
  • Actions: Native planting, permaculture design
  • Deliverables: Biodiversity index, soil improvement reports
  • Outputs: Living urban ecosystems

Task 5.2: Climate Resilience Features

  • Steps: Rainwater harvesting, green infrastructure
  • Actions: Implement shading, habitat corridors
  • Deliverables: Design templates, water usage logs
  • Outputs: Adaptation-ready neighbourhoods

Evaluation Criteria: Biodiversity levels; climate resilience indicators

Green building Pilot

Utilize a real or modelled example of a successful Green building (e.g., energy-positive community centre) as a central knowledge generator.

Objective: Align policy frameworks with sustainability through green buildings.

Tasks:

Task 1.1: Stakeholder Mapping & Policy Audit

  • Steps: Identify stakeholders, conduct policy review
  • Actions: Interviews, data collection
  • Deliverables: Stakeholder map, gap analysis
  • Outputs: Strategic alignment document

Task 1.2: Policy Co-Creation Workshops

  • Steps: Host participatory events
  • Actions: Draft sustainable policy proposals
  • Deliverables: Policy drafts
  • Outputs: Improved governance model

Evaluation Criteria: Number of policies influenced; engagement rate

Objective: Disseminate Green building knowledge through education and research.

Tasks:

Task 2.1: Curriculum Integration

  • Steps: Partner with educators
  • Actions: Develop sustainability modules
  • Deliverables: Curriculum toolkit
  • Outputs: Teaching materials

Task 2.2: Research & Innovation Labs

  • Steps: Establish living labs
  • Actions: Conduct joint studies
  • Deliverables: Case studies, prototypes
  • Outputs: Innovation hubs

Evaluation Criteria: Number of participants; research output

Objective: Stimulate green entrepreneurship.

Tasks:

Task 3.1: Innovation Incubators

  • Steps: Set up incubators
  • Actions: Support startups
  • Deliverables: Business models
  • Outputs: Green SME ecosystem

Task 3.2: Procurement & Incentives

  • Steps: Develop supply chain links
  • Actions: Policy alignment with economic goals
  • Deliverables: Incentive frameworks
  • Outputs: Stimulated local economy

Evaluation Criteria: Number of businesses supported; investment generated

Objective: Empower communities in innovation processes.

Tasks:

Task 4.1: Citizen Science & Co-Design

  • Steps: Facilitate workshops
  • Actions: Community prototyping
  • Deliverables: Co-designed models
  • Outputs: Innovation from the ground up

Task 4.2: Public Awareness Campaigns

  • Steps: Design campaigns
  • Actions: Disseminate success stories
  • Deliverables: Media outputs
  • Outputs: Increased environmental literacy

Evaluation Criteria: Participation rates; public perception

Objective: Ensure eco-alignment and resilience.

Tasks:

Task 5.1: Environmental Monitoring

  • Steps: Install monitoring tools
  • Actions: Collect and analyse data
  • Deliverables: Environmental reports
  • Outputs: Sustainability dashboard

Task 5.2: Nature-Based Integration

  • Steps: Implement green design features
  • Actions: Evaluate ecological outcomes
  • Deliverables: Biodiversity index, design guides
  • Outputs: Resilient infrastructure

Evaluation Criteria: Biodiversity metrics; carbon reduction

Final Remarks #

The BeCom Roadmap stands as a robust, actionable framework for catalysing sustainable and regenerative community development. By weaving together, the New European Bauhaus principles, the Quintuple Helix Model, and adult learning best practices, it provides communities with the tools and strategies needed to address complex environmental and social challenges.

Crucially, the roadmap is not just theoretical—it is supported by practical tools, digital resources, and clear evaluation metrics to guide implementation and measure impact. The inclusion of annexes, such as e-learning transformation guidelines, stakeholder engagement toolkits, and visual standards, ensures that all participants can effectively apply the methodology in their unique contexts.

As the BeCom project moves forward, it is essential to recognize that sustainable community transformation is an ongoing journey. Success will depend on continuous learning, adaptive collaboration, and the active engagement of all stakeholders across the five helices. By embracing the principles and methodologies outlined in this guide, and by utilizing the accompanying practical resources, communities can work together to create a more sustainable, inclusive, and aesthetically enriching future for all.

Funded by the European Union. Views and opinions expressed are however those of the author(s) only and do not necessarily reflect those of the European Union or the European Education and Culture Executive Agency (EACEA). Neither the European Union nor EACEA can be held responsible for them.