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Europan 18
2025

Nome

Create concepts and visions for a circular mineral park that challenges existing typologies of mono-functional industry planning.

About

This competition invites proposals for the future of the Fen Complex, Europe’s largest rare earth element (REE) discovery—a resource vital for technologies like supermagnets, computers, and rockets. This discovery pressures Nome municipality to allow mining, but no decision has been made yet. If approved, the mine will permanently alter the landscape, requiring extensive infrastructure, including landfills that could rival the size of nearby mountains.

Nome is exploring the consept of a Green Mineral Park—an industrial ecosystem where companies collaborate to minimize waste and maximize circularity. Typically only 1% of the rock extracted contains REEs, the remaining 99% holds untapped potential. Instead of focusing solely on technical and economic factors, this competition highlights the broader spatial and societal implications. How can such a transformation integrate with its surroundings and remain adaptable for future technologies? How can it benefit local communities?

Europan 18 invites architects, landscape designers, and planners to rethink industrial extraction—where infrastructure, ecologies, and communities coexist. Instead of a fixed master plan, proposals should offer a framework for discussion, helping local stakeholders understand the potential of this transformation. How can large-scale industries revitalize rather than deplete the small towns of Lunde and Ulefoss? How can this development set a precedent for sustainable mineral extraction elsewhere?

Photos of the site

Task

This is a speculative task asking you to be a futurologist. Use your skills as architects, landscapers, and planners to explore how one might imagine the planning of a circular industrial park with a large footprint.

  1. How can concepts for the Green Mineral Park ensure that industrial development is spatially, ecologically, and socially responsive?
  2. How can material reuse, reduced environmental impact, and industrial synergies transform mining byproducts into new opportunities for local development?
  3. How can you visualize spaces and strategies to help the public, decision-makers, and stakeholders imagine the park’s potential and spark discussions?
Photo showing Fen, where Europe's biggest reserves of REE's are found.

Site map

The municipality is currently evaluating four specific locations within the project site (yellow line), each reflecting the scale and requirements of the proposed Green Mineral park and associated landfills. We are looking for principles of design that can be applied to any of the sites, ensuring that its core ideas can be transferred and implemented regardless of location.

Within the study site (red line), you are free to work strategically and spatially, exploring how a Green Mineral park connects to the broader context, creating ripple effects that enhance the town’s attractiveness.

E18-NO-NOME-Brief 190225 by Bjørnar Haveland

Site facts

Location
Nome
Population
6 587 inhabitants
Size
XL
Project site
300 ha
Site proposed by
Nome municipality
Prize
1st prize: 12 000 EUR, 2nd prize: 6 000 EUR
Commission
After the competition, Nome municipality has the intention to award a contract to the winning team(s) for detailing the proposal further and adapting it to work as a base for the planning processes.

Register now

To compete you must register your team on the Europan competition portal. The registration fee is 100EUR and will give you access to maps,  images and 3d models. It will also allow you to ask questions anonymously. 

Timeline

Registrations open and details made public
3rd of March 2025
Submission deadline
29th of June 2025
Results announced
17th of November 2025
Photo from the site.


Submitted projects