Commission Notice C/2025/6438 from the European Commission, released last December, provides guidance to Member States on how to implement the EU Energy Performance of Buildings Directive (EPBD) and improve the efficiency of the residential building stock. In this context, the Opengela project is mentioned as an example of inspiring practice. It states that ‘the Opengela pilot project in the Basque Country offers neighbourhoods advice and support on the administrative, technical and financial aspects of energy-related issues, but also on other relevant topics, such as accessibility for people with disabilities’.
In addition to the one-stop shop service, the document states that Opengela has developed ‘an online tool with an energy map of all buildings in the Basque Country’, which provides ‘an integrated framework to support the development of renovation plans, complemented by estimates of the financial implications at multiple levels: national, regional, neighbourhood and individual housing’. This tool also makes it possible to ‘detect needs, including the identification of the least efficient buildings’ and serves as a starting point for each building to determine its energy renovation needs.
The European Commission includes this experience in a section on household advisory practices, recognising Opengela as an inspiring model for other European regions seeking to accelerate the energy renovation of their buildings.
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