Overview of Munich’s Digitalisation Strategy
Munich’s Digitalisation Strategy, titled “Digitalisierungsstrategie für München,” is the city’s comprehensive framework for guiding digital transformation. Developed by the IT‑Referat of the Landeshauptstadt München, the strategy aims to serve residents, businesses, and partners by embedding digital solutions across municipal services. It is publicly available on the city’s website https://muenchen.digital/strategie.html.
Core Principles Guiding the Strategy
The strategy rests on seven principles: information security and data protection, openness and transparency, standards and interoperability, sustainability, equality, inclusion and accessibility, user‑centred design, and digital sovereignty. These principles ensure that digital initiatives are responsible, secure, and accessible to all citizens.
Nine Action Fields Shaping Urban Life
The plan is organised into nine thematic action fields: Digital Government, Community and Participation, Culture, Sport and Leisure, Education, Work and Economy, Health and Security, Climate and Environment, Mobility, and Infrastructure. Each field targets specific improvements, such as modernising online citizen services, promoting digital inclusion, integrating IT in schools, supporting startups, applying digital tools for public health, and building a resilient digital backbone.
Digital Twin Munich: A Key Infrastructure
A central element is the Digital Twin Munich, an advanced 3D virtual model linked to real‑time data. Initiated as a funded project and institutionalised in December 2020, it supports climate simulation, urban planning, citizen participation, and environmental monitoring. The Urban Data Platform serves as the hub, unifying previously separate systems.
Smarter Together: EU‑Funded Smart‑City Success
The EU‑funded Smarter Together project (2016–2021) partnered Munich with Lyon and Vienna. In the Neuaubing‑Westkreuz and Freiham districts, €20 million (including €6.85 million EU funding) enabled retrofitting of roughly 42,000 m² of residential space, installation of photovoltaics, e‑mobility stations, smart street lighting, and a data platform. The project achieved over 20 % reductions in CO₂ emissions, similar gains in renewable energy use, and increased energy efficiency.
Related Initiatives Enhancing Sustainability
Complementary projects include City2Share (shared mobility), Civitas Eccentric (sustainable urban mobility), and the Connected Urban Twins (CUT) collaboration with Hamburg and Leipzig, funded with €32.4 million to develop open‑source digital‑twin tools. These initiatives reinforce Munich’s commitment to sustainable, data‑driven urban development.
Impact on Citizens and Services
Munich’s online citizen services have recorded more than three million transactions, demonstrating tangible benefits of the digitalisation strategy for everyday life. By integrating sustainability into digital infrastructure, the city offers a model for other European municipalities seeking to combine smart‑city technologies with climate‑friendly housing and urban planning.
