The result D1 “Adaptation policies and measures for enabling a climate-proof built environment at different scales” addresses the need for clear guidance to public decision-makers on how to identify, select, and evaluate adaptation policies and measures that can strengthen the climate-proofing of the built environment. While many adaptation frameworks exist at global or national levels, local administrations often lack tools to translate them into context-specific plans and actionable measures. 

By providing an organised framework that simplifies complex data, it enables planners and decision-makers to integrate scientific insights into operational processes more effectively. This methodology supports the development of resilient strategies and mitigates potential vulnerabilities. 

To fill this gap, a structured methodology has been developed under T2.1, and further refined under T8.1, to review adaptation policies at different spatial scales (global, European, national, and local) and analyze measures derived from them. The main outcomes are two digital catalogues of adaptation policies and measures applicable at multiple spatial scales — from buildings and public spaces to urban and regional contexts. They combines criteria to analyze policy and measures, evaluation guidance, and factsheets including a description of the main features of adaptation measures (e.g. climate hazard addressed, scale of intervention, processes, functions, benefits and co-benefits) and their contribution to climate-proofing across six resilience dimensions (physical, human health, well-being, and quality of life, technical, economic, environmental, and organizational).

The tool takes the form of a digital catalogue that supports users in aligning their interventions with broader climate goals while ensuring local relevance. The catalogues are hosted on Zenodo and currently available with restricted access (catalogue of adaptation policies: tbd; catalogue of adaptation measures: https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.17143173). The aim is to make them freely available once the associated scientific publications are accepted, ensuring that local administrations and policymakers can easily access, use, and share the tools. 

The target users are primarily local policymakers, urban and regional planners, and public administrations (including civil protection and climate units). 

By providing them with an accessible repository of adaptation policies and measures, as well as evaluation framework, the tool helps them better understand existing policy landscapes, select effective measures, and design integrated, climate-proof strategies. 

The tool is being tested in the Spanish demo site, where the methodology developed in earlier project phase has been applied to analyse and compare existing local adaptation policies addressing climate hazards such as heatwaves, floods, and droughts, as well as measures derived from them. Feedback from this real-world application will support further refinement and validation of the approach and catalogue before its integration into the MULTICLIMACT toolkit

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