European Network of Regional Knowledge Hubs
In a world focused on building new platforms, we propose a different approach:
Traditional Approach
Building new structures
Meitheal Approach
Nurturing connections
Drawing from the Irish tradition of Meitheal — where communities come together to achieve what individuals cannot do alone — we present a vision for collaborative knowledge networks rooted in local cultures and growing organically across Europe.
Nurturing Local Knowledge Networks from the Ground Up
Drawing from Ireland's rich tradition of "Meitheal" - the coming together of neighbors to accomplish tasks no individual could complete alone - we reimagined how architectural education could address climate change and sustainability challenges.
Six Irish architecture schools collaborating as equals, each contributing unique insights rooted in local knowledge and expertise.
Additional learning places, topics, concepts, methods, and content created, impacting irish students and professionals across diverse communities.
Our organic approach connects professional bodies, activist networks, and public engagement platforms into one interconnected ecosystem.
Not to build new platforms, but to connect existing networks across Europe through the NEBA ecosystem, nurturing growth right where communities already flourish.
Integrated architecture via interlocking sustainable design strategies
Conservation of natural habitats from ecological and historical perspectives
State-of-the-art research in building reuse with focus on housing
Strategies for climate-responsive urban environments and communities
Methods for adaptive reuse and resilient retrofit of existing buildings
Immersive technologies for communicating architectural narratives
Interdisciplinary approaches to landscape assessment and evaluation
Climate-responsive solutions for heritage and vernacular structures
Digital tools and software for delivering low carbon designs
Design approaches for vulnerable coastal communities and infrastructures
Connecting local contexts to global sustainability challenges
We've transformed traditional CPDs into dynamic, place-based learning environments inspired by the Irish "Meitheal" tradition of communities working together.
The Irish "Meitheal" tradition describes how neighbors come together to help one another, building community through shared work and collaborative problem-solving.
Leveraging local history, culture, and heritage as foundations for learning
Workshops embedded in real neighborhoods, addressing actual local challenges
Knowledge and solutions emerge from ground-up collaboration rather than top-down frameworks
Creating "APIs between systems" rather than building new platforms
Our Focus: Not on building new nodes or platforms, but on nurturing organic, quality connections between existing communities. These connections evolve naturally, respecting local contexts while creating resilient knowledge networks.
A ground-up, organic approach to community knowledge creation rooted in local contexts
Practical content distilled from three years of collaborative development across Irish architecture schools
Creating connections between existing networks rather than building new organizational structures
Our Philosophy:
"We don't need to build new platforms - we need to build optimized connections between existing ones, nurturing communities where they already are."
"There is nothing in a caterpillar that tells you it's going to be a butterfly, or that the butterfly can fly."
— Buckminster Fuller
Local Knowledge
Rooted in heritage
Connected Networks
Evolving organically
Our approach doesn't just build knowledge - it nurtures communities, honors cultural heritage, and creates resilient connections that grow from the ground up.
We build connections between systems, not new platforms. Like APIs in the digital world, our Meitheal approach creates pathways for knowledge to flow organically between existing communities.
"Meitheal is the physical world counterpart to digital APIs—a system that thrives not through new platforms but through meaningful interconnections, fostering resilience and creating regenerative environments that benefit all species."
Six institutions collaborating across regions, each contributing unique perspectives and local knowledge
Establishing connections with the Nordic knowledge ecosystem through collaborative frameworks
Developed content focusing on sustainable practices, adaptive reuse, whole life design, and digital innovation
Transforming traditional CPDs into collaborative, community-based learning environments