Coordination hubs in Madison’s civic ecosystems
Some organizations connect multiple initiatives across transportation, housing, climate strategy, watershed planning, and regional development. These coordination hubs help align work across systems.
What coordination hubs do
Coordination hubs link actors that would otherwise operate separately. They support planning alignment, resource distribution, research translation, and cross-sector collaboration.
- Connect municipal departments and regional partners
- Support cross-sector planning processes
- Translate research into applied initiatives
- Coordinate funding and implementation layers
- Maintain continuity across long-term strategies
Examples of coordination hubs in Madison
Capital Area Regional Planning Commission (CARPC)
CARPC coordinates regional land use, environmental planning, and infrastructure strategy across municipalities in Dane County.
City of Madison Sustainability Program
The sustainability program connects climate strategy, transportation planning, building policy, and municipal implementation efforts.
University of Wisconsin–Madison research centers
University institutes support coordination between academic research, public agencies, and community initiatives across multiple ecosystems.
Why coordination hubs matter
Mapping coordination hubs helps explain how separate initiatives remain aligned across sectors and over time.