Building a Tool That Actually Helps: Inside PANTHEON’s Participatory Design Process

In technology, it’s easy to build a complex tool in a vacuum, only to find it doesn’t solve the real-world problems of its intended users. When it comes to disaster management, this gap between developers and first responders can mean the difference between a coordinated response and chaos.

The PANTHEON project is built to close this gap.

Our core philosophy is “participatory design”, a process of co-designing our Smart City Digital Twin with the end-users, not just for them. We are holding in-depth workshops with first responders, city administrators, and community representatives in Athens, Paris, and Vienna to ensure the tool we build is a tool they will actually use.

This entire methodology is detailed in our new public report, Deliverable 3.2: “Report on Participatory Design Process.”

This document is our blueprint for user-centered design. It outlines:

  • Who our key stakeholders are, from the civil protection agencies to the community groups.
  • What we learned from them about the biggest gaps in disaster management.
  • How their feedback and needs are being translated into specific applications and design recommendations for the PANTHEON platform.

To share these valuable insights, we’ve broken down this report into a 4-part blog series.

Explore the series:

This series is a look under the hood of our user-centered process, showing how we are working to build a tool that truly meets the needs of those on the front lines.


The PANTHEON project has received funding from the European Union’s Horizon Europe programme under Grant Agreement N°101074008.