
Grenoble-Alpes Métropole is France’s leading ‘green technology valley’, home to over 25 000 researchers and 700 high-tech companies. The metropolis hosts the GIANT campus — one of Europe’s largest science and innovation parks — bringing together CEA, CNRS, INRIA, and leading universities. It has been awarded the European Green Capital prize and consistently ranks amongst Europe’s foremost smart and sustainable urban territories.
Population
Area
Density
Altitude
Sustainability and Climate Vision
Grenoble-Alpes Métropole pursues an ambitious ecological transition strategy focused on climate neutrality, sustainable urban development and resilience to climate risks. The metropolitan authority promotes circular economy initiatives, sustainable mobility, energy transition and climate adaptation policies.
Digital and Innovation Vision
Grenoble is recognised as one of Europe’s leading innovation ecosystems, combining research institutions, universities and advanced technology companies. The metropolitan area promotes innovation-driven urban development and participates actively in European research and innovation programmes.
Strategic Priorities
– climate neutrality and ecological transition
– circular economy and waste reduction
– sustainable mobility and electrification
– climate adaptation and risk management
– innovation-driven urban development
Development Objectives
The metropolitan strategy aims to strengthen environmental sustainability, improve urban resilience and support innovative solutions addressing climate change, circular economy and sustainable urban systems.
Key Programs and Frameworks
Grenoble-Alpes Métropole actively participates in European cooperation and innovation programmes supporting experimentation in areas such as climate adaptation, circular economy, sustainable mobility and urban innovation.
Key projects include:
– Climaborough (Horizon Europe) – climate adaptation and sustainable urban planning
– Food Trails (Horizon 2020) – sustainable urban food systems and food resilience
– eCharge4Drivers (Horizon 2020) – electric mobility infrastructure and services
– Solstice – circular textile economy and waste reduction
– ECOLE (Alpine Space) – industrial ecology and circular economy strategies
– ADAPTNOW (Alpine Space) – climate adaptation and natural risk management
– SKALE2CT (INTERREG Europe) – innovation ecosystems and business acceleration
– IURC – international cooperation on renewable energy and innovation
– UNITES – integration of refugees through social innovation
– MUST-a-Lab – knowledge sharing and inclusion policies for refugee communities
Supporting initiatives include:
– ELENA programme (European Investment Bank) supporting large-scale energy renovation programmes such as MurMur.
The GrandAlpe area is characterized by dense urbanization primarily focused on automobiles, a legacy from the rapid development of the city in the 1960s and 1970s, notably during the 1968 Olympic Games.
Despite its currently stigmatized urban character, the area has numerous strengths that allow envisioning a radically different future:
Achievements
– European Green Capital 2022
– European Capital of Innovation 2026