Midstad Social Impact Dashboard
We make social impact visible – and therefore controllable.
The Midstad Social Impact Dashboard shows how places work – in buildings, neighbourhoods and cities. It reveals how people use spaces, how social quality develops and where there is potential for change. This creates a new basis for decisions on the transformation of existing properties and inner-city locations.
More than location, location, location: how social quality is redefining property values.
The key question is: How do we translate social quality into reliable key figures — and how does it relate to location quality and property value?
Understanding urban impact.
City centres are undergoing structural change. Monofunctional concepts are becoming less viable, while expectations regarding mixed use and quality of stay are rising. At the same time, there is a lack of standardised methods for accurately assessing the social impact and development potential of a location. Our dashboard closes this gap: it reveals the mechanisms at work between behaviour, functionality and economic performance.
Measurable indicators of social quality.The Midstad Social Impact Score.
The Midstad Social Impact Dashboard provides a new perspective on the impact of urban spaces. It reveals the mechanisms that shape places: how attraction arises, how attachment grows and how usage patterns change over time. These dynamics become visible and comprehensible in the dashboard – not as abstract theory, but in their effect on specific locations.
At a time when cities are facing profound transformations, the dashboard creates transparency about how social quality develops and what contribution individual locations make to vibrant, resilient urban structures. It shows where a location is stable, where there is potential for development and where changes can provide new impetus.
This makes the dashboard a tool that provides orientation. It supports decisions in projects, identifies areas for action and facilitates dialogue between owners, cities and investors. The ability to view social impact across locations and time periods creates a new level of comparability. This makes transformation not only analysable, but also controllable – in buildings, neighbourhoods and cities.