As Europe's major cities grapple with affordability, Madrid's innovative zoning reforms and rent caps are reshaping the urban landscape—but critics say enforcement remains the real challenge.
As the academic year winds down, institutions across the capital announce funding changes, infrastructure upgrades, and new digital initiatives set to reshape education in the city.
From cycling networks to urban forests, officials and environmental specialists outline an ambitious vision for transforming Spain's capital into a climate-resilient metropolis.
As Spain grapples with unprecedented migration flows, the capital faces critical decisions on housing, employment pathways and community cohesion that will reshape neighborhoods from Vallecas to Carabanchel.
As violent incidents spike across European capitals, Madrid's emergency services are implementing structural changes that could reshape how quickly help reaches residents in Chamberí, Salamanca, and beyond.
Community groups in Puente de Vallecas and San Cristóbal voice concerns about displacement and construction disruption as Madrid's transport authority moves forward with controversial underground project.
As city funding pressures mount, local associations in Malasaña, Chueca and beyond must decide whether to merge resources, go digital-first, or scale back—and the outcomes will reshape how madrileños connect.
City leaders and infrastructure experts are locked in debate over the future of metro extensions and urban mobility as Madrid grapples with congestion and growth.
As major cities worldwide race to meet climate targets, Madrid is accelerating its own environmental transformation—but experts say it still lags behind peers like Copenhagen and Berlin.
A decade of congestion, pollution warnings, and suburban frustration has transformed the Spanish capital's approach to mobility—reshaping everything from the M-30 ring road to the future of the metro.
As the capital's immigrant population reaches record levels, city officials and community leaders face critical decisions on housing, employment access, and social services that will reshape neighbourhoods from Lavapiés to Cuesta de Moyano.
Years of underinvestment in social housing and speculative property investment have created the perfect storm, forcing policymakers to finally confront the systemic failures that transformed neighborhoods from communities into financial assets.
As response times surge across the capital, residents and safety experts warn that chronic underfunding of emergency services threatens public safety in neighbourhoods from Malasaña to Salamanca.