MWCC participates in HUMANO and reinforces the debate on the urban future from a territorial, technological, and social perspective

12/02/2026

MWCC participates in HUMANO and reinforces the debate on the urban future from a territorial, technological, and social perspective

MWCC participates in HUMANO and reinforces the debate on the urban future from a territorial, technological, and social perspective

MWCC participated in HUMANO, a forum for reflection that brought together leaders from the fields of architecture, urban planning, technology, and culture to address the major challenges that define the present and future of the territory, the city, and building construction.

 

The event, structured around five main themes—territorial, urban, technological, cultural, and future—focused on a cross-cutting idea: the need to reconnect urban development with its human dimension.

 

Within the Urban theme: “The architecture of congestion,” MWCC president David García Núñez participated in a round table moderated by Koldo Monreal (Onhaus), alongside leading figures such as Itziar Navarro, Raquel Guerra (HouseEurope! Spain), José Antonio Granero (ENTREABIERTO / AGREGA), José Sanz (Batlle i Roig), and Araceli Martín-Navarro (Coword).

During the debate, key issues were addressed, such as:

  • The disorderly growth of cities and its structural and social consequences.

     

    Urban regeneration versus speculative demolition.

     

    The need to integrate innovation, planning, and social cohesion into urban models.

     

    The role of public-private partnerships in transforming the built environment.

     

    The round table revolved around a central reflection: cities grow soulless when they become detached from the human element. In this context, MWCC defended the importance of promoting urban models that integrate sustainability, technology, and citizen well-being, committing to strategic planning that combines efficiency, identity, and quality of life.

    HUMANO also addressed the demographic challenge, algorithmic Spain, design policy, and decarbonization, consolidating itself as a space for cross-disciplinary thinking where architecture, technology, and culture engage in dialogue with the common goal of redefining the urban future.

    MWCC's participation in this forum reinforces its commitment to creating spaces for strategic debate and building more resilient, connected, and people-oriented cities.