Varaždin Takes the Wheel: Pioneering Responsible Innovation in Urban Mobility

On 22–23 October 2025, the Croatian city of Varaždin hosted the first Demonstration Days of the GINEVRA project, marking a major milestone in Central Europe’s efforts to shape the future of autonomous mobility. Over two days, the city transformed its airfield into a real-life test environment, where citizens, students, public institutions, and professionals experienced firsthand how responsible innovation can be governed on the ground.

Funded by the Interreg Central Europe Programme, GINEVRA helps cities develop and test governance tools to responsibly manage technological transformations – such as autonomous vehicles – while keeping citizens at the heart of decision-making.

From policy to practice

Organised by the City of Varaždin, together with GINEVRA partners, the Demonstration Days brought together a variety of community groups and local stakeholders to test the autonomous shuttle developed within the project.

Before the official opening, emergency services tested the vehicle on 21 October, ensuring that safety protocols were in place for all participants. The following days were structured around thematic sessions:

  • Day 1 (22 October): Public authorities, students, elderly citizens, and people with special needs
  • Day 2 (23 October): Academic institutions, professional associations, businesses, and emergency service representatives

Each group experienced a test drive and was invited to share feedback using the GINEVRA app, a digital tool designed to capture citizens’ perceptions, comfort levels, and trust in autonomous technologies. This participatory approach turns the demos into both a technological experiment and a social dialogue on innovation governance.

Innovation with inclusion

While the self-driving shuttle captured attention, the true focus of Varaždin’s Demo Days was inclusion. The city demonstrated how innovation can be tested in a way that is accessible, transparent, and beneficial to all segments of society – from schoolchildren learning about future mobility, to elderly residents exploring accessibility solutions.

This approach mirrors the essence of GINEVRA: that innovation must be co-designed, citizen-oriented, and ethically guided. By engaging multiple user groups, Varaždin proved that responsible governance is not only about regulating technology, but also about building trust and understanding citizens’ perspectives.

In the national spotlight

The event attracted nationwide media coverage, with reports featured on Croatia’s three national television channels (HRT, NOVA TV, and RTL), as well as local broadcaster VTV and numerous online media outlets.

Highlights include:

  • City of Varaždin Official News : announcing the local initiative and its European relevance
  • eVaraždin :  featuring video coverage from the demonstration site
  • Mnovine.hr : highlighting the public participation aspect and community engagement
  • Financije.hr : focusing on the economic and technological dimensions of the project
  • Zimo Dnevnik : presenting the innovation and technology narrative to national audiences
  • Regionalni.com : offering photos and testimonials from participants at the airfield
  • Varaždinske Vijesti : documenting the live demonstration and reactions from local citizens

Watch the HRT national report here.

Leading by example

The Varaždin Demonstration Days marked the first real-world milestone of GINEVRA, setting a precedent for the project’s next pilots in Cesena (Italy) and Bad Schönborn (Germany). Insights collected from participants will contribute to a transnational strategy for governing technological innovation across Central Europe.

As Mayor Neven Bosilj noted, “Varaždin has shown that even smaller cities can play a big role in shaping the future of mobility. We are proud to be part of a European initiative that not only tests technology but also builds trust, inclusion, and awareness among citizens.”

About GINEVRA

GINEVRA – Governance Innovation for Emerging Technologies in Responsible Automotive Mobility – is an Interreg Central Europe project supporting cities in governing transformative innovations such as autonomous vehicles. The project develops governance guidelines and citizen engagement tools tested in pilot actions across Europe, contributing to a transnational strategy for responsible innovation.

Discover how GINEVRA helps cities across Central Europe govern innovation responsibly: www.interreg-central.eu/projects/ginevra

Marco Boaria and ALDA+ at TEDxVicenza: “Europe – the Project that Designs Us”

On 9 November 2025, Marco Boaria, Director of Programmes & Development at ALDA – European Association for Local Democracy and CEO of ALDA+, took part in TEDxVicenza with a talk that blended history, identity, and European citizenship under the title “Europa: il Progetto che ci progetta” (“Europe: the Project that Designs Us”).

The event was held at H-FARM International School in Vicenza — Visionary Partner of TEDxVicenza 2025 — where participants spent a full day exploring workshops and immersive experiences dedicated to communication, sustainability, art, inclusion, and innovation.

A European Approach Rooted in the Local

In his talk at TEDxVicenza, Marco Boaria offered a powerful reflection on what it truly means to work with and for Europe today. According to Boaria, the European Union should not be seen as a distant institution or a mere source of funding, but as a shared space of cooperation, where citizens, local authorities, and civil society organisations act as co-creators of change.

“Europe is not something we receive — it is something we build, together.”

Drawing on the experience of ALDA and ALDA+, Marco presented an approach based on partnership, where territories are not passive beneficiaries of European policies, but active actors in their design and implementation.
Through cooperation, participation, and the exchange of good practices, Europe becomes a concrete driver for local development, capable of generating real impact within communities.

Through an interactive and immersive experience inspired by the Alta Via della Grande Guerra, Marco guided the audience on a symbolic journey across the Prealps of Vicenza — a territory where nature, history, and collective memory intertwine. These mountains, rich with trenches, forts, and paths carved during World War I, form a living museum that preserves both the scars and values of the past.

He recalled how, since 2001, the Province of Vicenza, together with the Unione Montana Spettabile Reggenza dei Sette Comuni, the Veneto Region, and 24 municipalities, has worked to restore and enhance this extraordinary heritage. The result is the Alta Via della Grande Guerra delle Prealpi Vicentine — a cultural and natural route that connects over 200 kilometres of trails, linking memorials, museums, and fortifications, including the Italian and Austro-Hungarian strongholds.

At the heart of this initiative lie the four military memorials of Pasubio, Cimone, Asiago, and Grappa — tangible symbols of memory, freedom, and shared identity.

During his talk, Marco drew a parallel between this local project and the broader European project, reminding the audience that:

Europe is not just an institution, but a shared design — a living project.

By comparing the restoration of historical memory to European cooperation, he invited participants to see themselves as European project designers, capable of transforming daily challenges into opportunities for change. His message highlighted how European values — democracy, solidarity, sustainability, and territorial cohesion — translate every day into tangible actions across territories, turning Europe into a living project, built from the ground up and for everyone.

The recording of the TEDxVicenza 2025 talk will be available soon.

ALDA+ launches its new Training Cycle on EU-Funded Programmes – Register now!

Do you have a project in mind, but no budget to realise it? Are you wondering how to navigate in the EU funding landscape?

Join the training cycle on EU-funded programmes delivered by ALDA+!

It will provide you with theoretical and hands-on knowledge on the EU programmes. Our experienced project designers and developers will guide you through this journey, sharing practical tools to get the funds that will turn your project into reality!

What are the objectives?

  • Providing a clear understanding of the main EU programmes (Erasmus+, CERV, LIFE, Horizon Europe and much more) and their funding mechanisms;
  • Building participants’ capacity in designing, managing, and reporting EU-funded projects;
  • Sharing practical tools & examples from ALDA’s extensive project portfolio;
  • Fostering networking among organisations working with EU funds.

Why should you choose ALDA?

  • +20 years of experience in successful applications across multiple funding programmes;
  • The possibility to benefit from our extensive network, which includes local authorities, NGOs, universities and institutions;
  • Practical methodology;
  • The flexible format of the training that allows you to choose one or more sessions according to your interests and needs;
  • Certificate of attendance issued at the end of the course. 

Who is this course for?

Anyone interested in understanding the mechanism of the EU-funded programmes. 

In particular, project managers and developers, local and regional authorities, NGOs and associations, freelancers and consultants interested in EU project work.


Practical information

  • Dates: From 20 November to 16 December, 2025
  • Duration: 8 sessions in total | 2 hours each
  • Format: Online
  • Language: English
  • Fee: 320€ full package (all 8 sessions) | 50€ each session, should you be interested in only one (or more) topic

Please click here for the detailed agenda.

Register now!

Registrations are open until 15 November!

To secure your spot, write an email to:  training@aldaplus.it , we will give you all the necessary information to enrol in the course.

To secure your spot, a 50€ deposit is asked at the moment of enrolment. Please note that the number of places available is limited.

Don’t miss the opportunity to learn how to turn your ideas into action through the EU-funded programmes!