Tools and solutions for EU public sector institutions
Cultural centre websites need to support public information, participation and day-to-day administration. Visitors should be able to find events, book places, understand ongoing activities and access information on any device, with accessibility, GDPR and multilingual needs built in from the start.
Events are published across separate pages, documents or social channels, so visitors struggle to see what is on, when it takes place and how to attend.
Bookings handled by phone or email take staff time, make capacity harder to manage and can lead to inconsistent confirmation for participants.
Residents cannot easily understand which clubs, classes or community groups are active, who they are for or how to join.
If the site is difficult to use with assistive technology, mobile devices or different language needs, people may be excluded from cultural participation.
We create a clear event structure where visitors can browse upcoming activities, view practical details and move directly to booking or contact options.
We provide straightforward registration flows with capacity handling, confirmations and the information needed to manage attendance more consistently.
We organise clubs, workshops, collectives and educational activities into clear sections so visitors can quickly see what is available and how to take part.
We assess the website against recognised accessibility requirements, review real user journeys and improve content structure, navigation and interface behaviour.
We provide structured maintenance, content support and documented reviews so the website remains reliable, compliant and easier for staff to oversee.
Most visitors come to the website to check what is happening and whether they can attend. A dedicated events section reduces confusion, helps people compare activities and gives staff one reliable place to maintain current information.
In many cases, yes. Even simple booking forms can reduce phone and email handling, give staff a clearer view of attendance and provide participants with a more consistent booking experience.
The website should support keyboard navigation, readable content structure, clear contrast, meaningful form labels and compatibility with assistive technologies. It should also be reviewed regularly as event content, documents and user journeys change.
The organisation. The domain and hosting must belong to the cultural centre, with invoices issued by the direct service provider.