First week in town, Mila stood outside the library at 07:59 with a phone almost empty and a full timetable. “If I can’t even find Lecture Hall C, how will I pass?” She scanned a QR at the tram stop, and a photoreal city twin bloomed on a borrowed tablet. “Login with eIDAS?” it asked. A minute later, a dotted line threaded from dorm to lab, past coffee and printers that actually worked.
Three universities share one city. Students juggle classes, labs, makerspaces, internships and civic events across campuses, operators and timetables. Information exists – just not where people are.
BizzTech Europe’s browser‑streamed UE5 twin stitches campus, city and transit into one navigable place – no installs, mid‑range devices welcome. Students authenticate via eIDAS (or EUDI wallet), then the twin pulls only what’s needed: timetable slots, room occupancy, shuttle headways, even quiet study zones. HAL8122™ personalises a day plan (“10 minutes early – elevator on the left is slower”), reserves equipment, and flags clashes before they become anxiety. Departments plug data via standard connectors; facilities staff update closures or detours once, everywhere.
Why it Matters: Freshers stop feeling lost and start feeling capable. Missed labs drop; shared facilities are used fairly; campus life spills into the city in a good way. Mila makes it to Hall C, prints her lab sheet en route, and later helps a classmate do the same – because she can actually see where her education lives.
EU‑by‑Design: GDPR‑native profiles (purpose‑bound, minimal), eIDAS signatures for exams and forms, EN 301 549 accessibility (alt‑text, captions, keyboard‑first flows), and transparent retention policies. Identity is verified without over‑collecting; rights are explained in plain language.