11 June 2025

Research into planning, reuse and renovation in the construction sector receives substantial grants from Formas, a government research council for sustainable development. Seven projects share a total of just over SEK 63 million in two areas, one being sustainable construction and the other Formas’ open call where researchers frame their research questions.

Johan Niskanen, Ida Grundel and Kristina Trygg,
Johan Niskanen, Ida Grundel, and Kristina Trygg will investigate how Swedish municipalities can work more with sustainable construction.  Photographer: Jonas Roslund

Closed down or moisture damaged schools. Empty office premises and apartment buildings. Or, on the other hand, housing shortages and increasing demand for elderly care homes. These are problems that municipalities have to deal with. Tearing down and building new has often been the simple solution, but new times place new demands.

Sustainable planning

Associate Professor Ida Grundel at TEMAT (Technology and Social Change) describes it as something of a dream project. Together with her colleagues Kristina Trygg and Johan Niskanen, she will over four years investigate how Swedish municipalities can work more with sustainable construction. This includes, for example, how new buildings can be planned in order to be used more flexibly, but not least how to renovate and reuse instead of building new ones.

“For the very reason that the construction sector is one of the major climate villains, these aspects must be included as part of community planning,” says Associate Professor Kristina Trygg.

The full name of the project is Circular Planning for transformative change through reuse and renovation (PLAN-C) (Swe: Cirkulär planering för transformativ förändring genom återanvändning och renovering (PLAN-C)). It has received just over SEK 11 million in grants over four years.

Inspiration from Sweden and Europe

The researchers will form a network together with municipal community planners. One purpose is to identify what currently hinders more sustainable planning. The hope is also to find smart ideas and solutions. In Östergötland there are examples from Norrköping's old factories and Linköping's former military area of the city, where old buildings have been converted for new purposes.

“Collecting lessons learned and creating some inspiration is important,” says Assistant Professor Johan Niskanen.

The researchers will also look for good examples in other European countries. One goal is to develop a kind of handbook and a digital knowledge platform for sustainable construction.

“We want the project to lead to something that municipalities can use in practice,” says Ida Grundel.


Projects receiving Formas grants:

Sustainable, circular and resource-efficient built environment

Wiktoria Glad, TEMAT (Technology and Social Change): c/o Glas - att göra planglas cirkulärt i samhällsbyggnadssektorn. (c/o Glass - making flat glass circular in the civil engineering sector.) (SEK 11.99 million)

Ida Grundel Berger, TEMAT (Technology and Social Change): Cirkulär planering för transformativ förändring genom återanvändning och renovering (Circular planning for transformative change through reuse and renovation (PLAN-C)) (SEK 11.12 million)

Sara Gustafsson, IEI (Department of Management and Engineering: Industriell symbios i kommuners arbete med strategisk etablering. (Industrial symbiosis in Municipalities’ work with strategic establishment.) (SEK 10.35 million)

Explore - Formas’ open call for research projects

Cecilia Åsberg, TEMAG (Gender Studies): Äta Världen: En explorativ studie av ekokreativa matmetoder för hållbart samkunskapande med en matigare miljöhumaniora och konstnärlig forskning. (Eating the World: An Exploratory Study of Eco-Creative Food Methods for Storying Exposures and Sustainable Research-Creation in the Environmental Humanities.) (SEK 5.99 million)

Robin Blomdin, TEMAM (Environmental Change): Temporal och rumslig fördelning av slamströmmar och deras påverkan på samhälle och infrastruktur i ett förändrat klimat. (Temporal and Areal dynamics of Debris flows and their impact on Swedish society (TARDIS) and infrastructure in a changing climate.) (SEK 5.99 million)

Per Wikman, TEMAT (Technology and Social Change): Externa experter i den svenska kommunala planeringen 1965–2030. (External experts in Sweden’s Municipal Planning 1965-2030.) (SEK 5.92 million)

Per Jensen, IFM (Department of Physics, Chemistry and Biology): Biologi och välfärd hos moderlösa djur i lantbruket - hjärnfunktion, gener och beteende med prägling hos kycklingar som modell. (Biology and welfare of motherless farm animals - brains, genes and behaviour using chicken imprinting as a model.) (SEK 5.79 million)

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