“…According to Yin, the analysis of multiple case studies guarantees a detailed and broad understanding of the topic, and the data collection and reprocessing of the data provide a scientific basis on which to compare and describe the chosen projects. The criteria on which the case studies were chosen was to choose recent projects -completed no more than ten years ago -of adaptive reuse in the European context, in the field of public uses for cultural and creative purposes, such as civic centres, media libraries, performance spaces, exhibition spaces, shared workspaces, of small-medium scale on the urban context (Lang, 2023;Lo Faro & Miceli, 2021;Plevoets & Van Cleempoel, 2019;Wong, 2016). The data collection (Figure 2) was conducted by searching for quantitative information on the projectssuch as dimensional values and costs of the reuse operations -descriptive sources -from the historical 'life' of the building to information about the processes of transformation, clients, management and financing, functional programmesbut also through in-site visits and photographic selection (Acar, 2018;Fitz & Lenz, 2015;Pelizzari & Scrivano, 2011).…”