Sustainable construction

Billion-kroner grant for green transition of the built environment

With a record-breaking research grant from the Villum Foundation, Aalborg University, Aarhus University, the Technical University of Denmark and the University of Southern Denmark are joining forces to advance efforts towards a more sustainable construction sector. In a historic research initiative, the four universities will create new knowledge that can have a decisive impact on our climate, environment and biodiversity.

Houses, roads and railway in a city. Photo: Istock/Westersoe
 Major research grant to support the green transition in construction. Photo: Istock/Westersoe

Facts

  • Official start: 1 January 2026
  • Budget: DKK 1 billion over ten years (2026–2035).
  • Midterm evaluation: After 4-5 years, the initiative is evaluated for continued support.
  • Partners: Aalborg University, Aarhus University, Technical University of Denmark and University of Southern Denmark.
  • Purpose: Capacity building in research and education to make Denmark a European leader in sustainable construction.
  • Scope: Research, joint educational initiatives, recruitment of international talent, industry collaboration, international networking, etc.

Facts

1. Sustainability assessment
This research field develops new methods for assessing the climate and environmental impact and resource consumption of buildings and infrastructure. The goal is to create precise, dynamic models that can guide the industry in meeting absolute sustainability goals and assist decision makers.
Contact: Harpa Birgisdottir, Professor, Aalborg University:
hbi@build.aau.dk
51 90 48 45

2. Design for regeneration, circularity and longevity
How do you build something that will last longer and be reused at the right time? This research area develops new design methods that combine circular economy, sustainable choice of materials and digital technology. This means buildings created for reuse and adapted to a low-carbon society, preferably without compromising on quality, durability or aesthetics.
Contact: Steffen Petersen, Professor, Aarhus University:
stp@cae.au.dk
41 89 33 47

3. Climate-friendly and robust building materials
The construction sector accounts for 31 percent of the world's material consumption. Researchers in this field are working to develop and test new, climate-friendly building materials. Such as building materials developed from recycled resources. Or new regenerative materials with a much lower CO2 footprint that at the same time retain strength and durability.
Contact: Lisbeth M. Ottosen, Professor, Technical University of Denmark: 
45 25 22 60 / 51 50 00 40

4. Digitalization and automation
Digitalization and automation are already revolutionizing construction. This field explores everything from artificial intelligence, robot assembly to 3D printing – methods that can help make new construction, renovation and demolition more resource-efficient.
Contact: Roberto Naboni, Associate Professor, University of Southern Denmark:
ron@iti.sdu.dk, 65 50 75 21

5. Climate-resilient and adaptable infrastructure
Climate change means more storms, cloudbursts and floods. This area is developing methods and technologies to make roads, bridges, ports and coastal protection more resilient – including through nature-based solutions, upgrading, advanced monitoring and optimized emergency response strategies.
Contact: Erik Damgaard Christensen, Professor, Technical University of Denmark:
 edch@dtu.dk, 45 25 13 98 / 40 21 91 84

6. Sufficiency, well-being and energy efficiency
Construction in a more sustainable world is not just about reducing CO2 emissions. It is also about how buildings affect people's health and well-being and meet actual needs. This field combines new principles of "sufficiency" with research on energy consumption, indoor climate and comfort, so that we can live and work in healthy and safe ways with fewer resources. 
Contact: Kirsten Gram-Hanssen, Professor, Aalborg University:
kgh@build.aau.dk, 23 60 56 53

7. Extending the lifespan of the built environment
Building new is expensive for the climate. Therefore, we must be better at renovating and upgrading what we already have. This field develops methods to assess the condition of buildings and structures, predict their lifespan, look at appropriate change of use and more sustainable renovation. 
Contact: Christos Georgakis, Professor, Aarhus University:
cg@cae.au.dk
51 15 74 78