Princely Government unveils green blueprint for Monaco's future
By Zak Jackson, MonacoViews Editorial
A major nature-integration study by landscape firm Grant Associates sets out how Monaco will embed biodiversity and resilience into future planning and development.
The Princely Government has released a comprehensive urban greening strategy under the banner "Renaturer la Ville" (Renaturalising the City), backed by a detailed study commissioned from British landscape architecture practice Grant Associates. The plan establishes the guiding principles that will shape planning and development decisions across the Principality going forward.
The strategy focuses on four priorities: strengthening the territory's resilience to climate and environmental pressures, improving long-term quality of life for residents, preserving and extending biodiversity, and embedding nature more deeply into Monaco's built environment. For a city-state defined by vertical density and limited land area, the challenge of integrating green infrastructure is considerably more complex than in conventional urban settings.
Minister of State Christophe Mirmand has been cited as a driving voice behind the initiative, acknowledging the particular difficulties of greening a compact, high-rise principality. The framework is not a single project but a phased set of principles intended to influence how individual development schemes are assessed and approved over the coming years.
For property owners and residents, the plan signals that future construction and renovation projects will face stronger expectations around green space, biodiversity contribution and environmental performance. Those with properties in lower-density districts such as Fontvieille and the Jardin Exotique quarter may see the earliest visible changes, though the strategy applies across all of Monaco's neighbourhoods.