A strategic blueprint for the resilient, innovative, climate-positive and community-focused cities of future generations
Ruth Melches
A city that is resilient, inclusive, climate-positive, and innovative is not just a conceptual vision – it has become a necessity. Urban areas around the world are undergoing profound change driven by a complex mix of environmental, social, technological, and economic forces. According to the United Nations, the proportion of the global population living in urban areas is expected to rise from approximately 57% in 2023 to 68% by 2050. Alongside this urban population explosion, cities face fundamental demographic shifts, rapid technological advancement, and increasing demand from investors and the public for sustainable living models that improve living conditions.
While solutions vary by region, the core challenge is universal: the traditional “Smart City” paradigm – focused largely on technology – falls short. The future city must be human-centered and adaptive, with digital tools serving as enablers to deepen ecological stewardship, social cohesion, and democratic governance. This is what we call the “Next-Generation City”.
This study – a collaboration between Strategy& and TÜV Rheinland – outlines a strategic blueprint for transforming urban spaces into resilient, inclusive, and climate-positive ecosystems by 2050. The concept of the Next-Generation City is not utopian; it is a necessary and practical response to global challenges such as climate change, demographic shifts, resource scarcity, and digital transformation.
Moving beyond the traditional “Smart City” framework, we introduce a more comprehensive, human-centered concept: the “Next-Generation City“, a city that leverages technology within a broader framework of sustainable and community-oriented development.
While the Next-Generation City will not emerge overnight, its foundations are being laid today. We take the year 2050 as our strategic horizon – distant enough to allow structural change to take effect, yet near enough for today's decisions, technologies, and governance models to shape tomorrow's cities.
Our vision for the Next-Generation City is based on the principle that meaningful urban transformation must be holistic and innovative, with resilience, sustainability, and inclusion as interdependent pillars of future urban life. We see six core dimensions shaping the city of 2050: resources and sustainability, digitization and infrastructure, urban planning and mobility, social cohesion and cultural integration, governance and participation, and experience-driven design.
The following sections explore these six dimensions in depth:
The Next-Generation City is a place of sustainable living, where resources are carefully managed and environmental impact is minimized. This vision relies on innovative concepts such as integrated energy and resource planning, circular economy principles, climate-positive infrastructure, sustainable supply chain management, and sponge city designs.
Digitization and modern infrastructure expansion are key elements in the transition toward Next-Generation Cities, making urban spaces more efficient, sustainable, and livable. State-of-the-art technologies, improved data infrastructures, data analytics, and networked services all play important roles in a comprehensive digital transformation strategy.
Successful urban planning and mobility can only be achieved through a holistic, interdisciplinary approach that combines environmental, economic, and social aspects. The Next-Generation City will be a place where innovation and quality of life go hand in hand.
The challenges facing modern societies – be it climate change, social inequalities, or digital transformation – require a new understanding of governance. This approach is based on values such as agility, digital participation, and transparent decision-making processes that promote socially inclusive development across the public sector.
A Next-Generation City places people and relationships at its core, treating social cohesion (positive relationships among residents) and cultural integration (active inclusion and shared expression of diverse identities) as equally important to technological advancement.
The Next-Generation City is guided by a clear strategy and ambition. Defined strategic design principles around topics such as economic opportunity, livability and community, as well as access to technology and resources, are critical in setting the framework for what life in the city needs to be.
By embracing a holistic approach that integrates technological innovation, environmental stewardship, and social inclusion, cities can unlock significant benefits while enhancing livability and democratic governance. The investments outlined create a virtuous cycle: they reduce operational costs, lower emissions, improve public health, and foster social cohesion – delivering both immediate gains and long-term urban vitality:
| 1. Operational cost savings | 2. Infrastructure and maintenance savings | 3. Public health and public sector efficiency | 4. Revenue generation and economic growth |
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Overcoming common barriers to Next-Generation City initiatives requires more than technical innovation. It demands clear strategies, stable frameworks, and the ability to translate ambition into operational reality. Leading cities around the world demonstrate that successful urban transformation is built on a few robust cornerstones rather than countless isolated actions. Four factors stand out as particularly decisive in achieving lasting, scalable impact:
Transforming cities into future-proof ecosystems requires coordinated action across politics, business, and civil society. Each sector plays a distinct role in shaping urban futures that are resilient, inclusive, and climate-positive:
Political institutions (municipalities, regional authorities, national governments) must provide enabling frameworks and strategic vision that support long-term urban transformation
Business drives technological advancement, infrastructure development, and service innovation – bringing expertise, scalability, and investment capacity to urban transformation
Civil society (residents, NGOs, community groups, cultural institutions) ensures development remains human-centered and socially inclusive, contributing lived experience, community resilience, and social innovation
The Next-Generation City extends far beyond technological infrastructure. Its success depends on multi-stakeholder collaboration: when politics provides vision and regulatory support, business delivers innovation and investment, and civil society contributes community insight and resilience, cities evolve into adaptive ecosystems capable of thriving amid global disruption.
Franziska Meyer, Navar Shad, Lina Kaniewski, and Leon Grütters co-authored this report.