Co-developing urban spaces for Ghana’s communities
The project transforms public areas through participatory placemaking, youth empowerment, and tactical urbanism to build resilient, inclusive spaces.
Years active:
2026 - 2029
Related ICLEI Pathway(s)
Locations
Funded by
About
Project summary
Urban Fabric Initiative Tamale: Spaces for Placemaking Agency, Resilience and Knowledge is a community-centred urban resilience initiative that uses public space as a catalyst for social cohesion, climate resilience, and inclusive city-making in Tamale, Ghana. Working in the vulnerable neighbourhoods of Bipela, Tutingli, Nalung and Lamakara, the project brings together communities, youth, local authorities, and technical partners to co-design and implement public space improvements that respond to local needs and aspirations.
Through participatory diagnosis, design thinking, tactical urbanism, and youth-led innovation, UFI Tamale empowers residents to shape the future of their neighbourhoods while strengthening links between community action and formal planning processes. The project combines larger “anchor” public space interventions with smaller youth-designed “mosaic” projects, creating opportunities for experimentation, learning, and long-term stewardship.
Implemented under the Sustainable Cities Ghana programme, and the Tamale Urban Resilience Project (TURP), UFI Tamale aims to develop replicable placemaking approaches that support more inclusive, resilient, and socially owned urban development. The project is implemented by ICLEI Africa, alongside partners University of Development Studies, and Youth Empowerment for Life Ghana.
Urban Fabric Initiative Tamale: Spaces for Placemaking Agency, Resilience and Knowledge is a community-centred urban resilience initiative that uses public space as a catalyst for social cohesion, climate resilience, and inclusive city-making in Tamale, Ghana. Working in the vulnerable neighbourhoods of Bipela, Tutingli, Nalung and Lamakara, the project brings together communities, youth, local authorities, and technical partners to co-design and implement public space improvements that respond to local needs and aspirations.
Through participatory diagnosis, design thinking, tactical urbanism, and youth-led innovation, UFI Tamale empowers residents to shape the future of their neighbourhoods while strengthening links between community action and formal planning processes. The project combines larger “anchor” public space interventions with smaller youth-designed “mosaic” projects, creating opportunities for experimentation, learning, and long-term stewardship.
Implemented under the Sustainable Cities Ghana programme, and the Tamale Urban Resilience Project (TURP), UFI Tamale aims to develop replicable placemaking approaches that support more inclusive, resilient, and socially owned urban development. The project is implemented by ICLEI Africa, alongside partners University of Development Studies, and Youth Empowerment for Life Ghana.
Project aims
- Strengthen urban resilience and social cohesion by creating inclusive, climate-responsive public spaces that reflect community needs and priorities.
- Empower youth as city-makers and change agents through capacity building, mentorship, design thinking, and participation in co-designing and constructing public space interventions.
- Promote participatory planning and governance by enabling communities, local authorities, and stakeholders to collaboratively diagnose challenges and co-design solutions.
- Demonstrate innovative placemaking approaches through tactical urbanism and small-scale experimentation that can inform larger urban planning and investment processes.
- Establish sustainable management and replication mechanisms that ensure long-term stewardship of public spaces and support the scaling of successful approaches across Tamale and beyond.
- Strengthen urban resilience and social cohesion by creating inclusive, climate-responsive public spaces that reflect community needs and priorities.
- Empower youth as city-makers and change agents through capacity building, mentorship, design thinking, and participation in co-designing and constructing public space interventions.
- Promote participatory planning and governance by enabling communities, local authorities, and stakeholders to collaboratively diagnose challenges and co-design solutions.
- Demonstrate innovative placemaking approaches through tactical urbanism and small-scale experimentation that can inform larger urban planning and investment processes.
- Establish sustainable management and replication mechanisms that ensure long-term stewardship of public spaces and support the scaling of successful approaches across Tamale and beyond.
Urban Fabric Initiative Tamale puts communities and youth at the centre of city-making, transforming public spaces into hubs of resilience, inclusion, learning, and collective stewardship.
team manager
Main project contact
Ruby Schalit
Professional Officer
The project team
Co-developing urban spaces for Ghana’s communities team
Paul Currie
Director: Urban Systems Unit
Palesa Base
Professional Officer: Urban Systems
Palesa is a climate and development professional with three years of experience at the intersection of climate adaptation, gender, social inclusion and urban sustainability. She holds
an Honours degree in Environmental and Geographical Science from the University of Cape Town, where she graduated with distinction. Palesa applies a transdisciplinary, rights-based approach to research, advocacy and implementation, and has led GESI-integrated project delivery, M&E frameworks and capacity-building initiatives. Grounded in environmental and social justice, she is able to translate complex data into actionable, community-driven strategies that bridge science, policy and practice to co-create equitable, resilient and locally grounded solutions across African urban contexts.
Jokudu Guya
Professional Officer: Urban Systems Unit
Jokudu Guya is an Urban Systems Professional Officer with a strong interest in urban development across African cities. At ICLEI Africa, she works closely with local governments to implement circular economy initiatives and identify opportunities to embed circular approaches into urban systems. Her areas of focus include the Circular Economy, water-energy-food nexus, and waste management, alongside broader themes in sustainable urban development. Jokudu holds a Master’s degree in Urban Studies and has a background in city development research, with experience in smart cities, urban data, and governance.
Erin Hill
Communications Officer
Carina Mason
Communications Officer
Carina has 12 years’ experience in the writing and editing industry, with over 5 years in the non-profit space. She is passionate about contributing her skillset to the sustainable growth of the African cities that ICLEI’s projects support. Carina holds a Master’s degree in Media Studies with distinction from Wits University. She has always been interested in the intersection of media and communication with environmental issues, and the impact that the right message can have in making lasting, positive change.