The MULTICLIMACT Human-built Environment Resilience Framework addresses the absence of a holistic, operational, and multi-scale methodology to assess resilience in the built environment while integrating social dimensions such as wellbeing, vulnerability, and quality of life.

Existing resilience tools often focus narrowly on climate risk, infrastructure performance, or vulnerability in isolation. In contrast, the MULTICLIMACT framework provides a systemic approach that captures the interdependencies between physical assets, urban systems, social conditions, and locally relevant climate and non-climate hazards. Additionally, it considers areas and assets of cultural heritage. 

The framework is operationalised through the MULTICLIMACT Resilience Scorecard and a set of quantitative Key Performance Indicators (KPIs). Together, these components translate the conceptual model into an applied assessment mechanism. The framework can be implemented at multiple spatial scales, from individual buildings and neighbourhoods to cities and territories. Its core functions include baseline resilience assessment, scenario comparison, monitoring of resilience progress over time, and evaluation of resilience-building interventions. By linking resilience outcomes to measurable indicators, the framework supports evidence-based decision-making and investment prioritisation.

Currently, the framework is accessible within the scope of the MULTICLIMACT project through WP1 outputs. To ensure broader uptake beyond the project lifetime, future accessibility pathways may include the development of an open digital platform and targeted training modules or webinars. Integration into European climate adaptation initiatives and alignment with EU-funded programmes would further enhance visibility and scalability. 

The primary user group includes local and regional governments, metropolitan authorities, and public agencies responsible for urban development, housing, infrastructure, and climate adaptation planning. Secondary users include consultancy and advisory organisations supporting public-sector climate planning, city and regional networks, EU-funded resilience initiatives, academia, and building or infrastructure managers.

For future users, the framework contributes by transforming resilience from a broad strategic ambition into a measurable and operational planning practice. It enables authorities to identify cross-sectoral vulnerabilities, understand cascading risks, prioritise adaptation investments, integrate wellbeing considerations into resilience strategies, and monitor progress systematically. The KPI-based structure also strengthens the justification of funding applications and policy decisions.

Within MULTICLIMACT, the framework is being tested in the project’s demo sites (WP11) through the CREMA tool application. This testing phase allows validation of methodological robustness, scalability, and usability in real-world contexts. Finally, the framework has a strong connection with the CREMA tool.  
It provides a structured backbone for measuring the AS-IS resilience and offers tested indicators for resilience assessments.