đź«‚Community Resilience Hubs
Houston
Oakland
Vancouver
Cities create multi-purpose community facilities that provide trusted, accessible spaces for climate and health resilience, offering cooling or heating relief, information, essential services and year-round support.
How cities are applying it
- In Oakland, resilience hubs are being developed through community-based facilities that offer cooling and clean-air refuge during extreme heat and smoke events and provide ongoing programmes and services that strengthen local resilience.
- Houston is building a neighbourhood network of resilience hubs to improve emergency readiness, support residents who face the greatest exposure during storms and expand access to resources before and after major events.
- Vancouver is working with community partners to establish hubs within existing facilities such as community centres and neighbourhood houses. These hubs combine physical upgrades with social infrastructure, offering climate-related services, emergency support and culturally informed programming in spaces residents already trust.
Together, these examples show how resilience hubs act as vital community anchors, strengthening social networks, improving emergency preparedness and supporting people during climate-driven events.
Why it matters
Climate shocks often disrupt essential services and expose residents to extreme temperatures, smoke or flooding. Community resilience hubs provide reliable, decentralised support that helps communities stay safe and connected when conditions deteriorate. They also strengthen everyday resilience by offering programmes that build skills, support wellbeing and reinforce local networks.
Who is involved
• Community organisations and neighbourhood leaders
• Emergency management agencies
• Public health and social services teams
• Planning, facilities and energy departments
• Local partners supporting programming, outreach and maintenance