arrow_back Back to blog

image: Tulln an der Donau, Hauptplatz © C.Stadler/Bwag

Community feeling is universal. That is the most important conclusion following our recent pilot in the Austrian city of Tulln an der Donau. While Hoplr is already an established value for neighbourhood communication and social cohesion in the Benelux, we looked forward with healthy anticipation to our first steps in the German-speaking market. The results of the pilot speak for themselves: Hoplr works, connects, and activates – in Austria as well.

In this blog post, we take you through the results of our collaboration with the municipality of Tulln and demonstrate why a digital neighbourhood network offers universal added value.

The Perfect Match: Stadt des Miteinanders

Tulln an der Donau is a historic municipality in Lower Austria with approximately 17,000 inhabitants. What makes Tulln, also known as the Gartenstadt (City of Gardens) due to its many parks and gardens, so special is not just its location on the Danube, but primarily its progressive vision on living together.

Under the banner “Stadt des Miteinanders” (City of Togetherness), the policy has been strongly focusing on local community building for years. They strive for an inclusive city where residents support, know, and work with each other.

“True community spirit is characterized by a climate of good neighbourly relations: Good neighbours complement and support each other. They look out for one another and therefore recognize when someone is going through a difficult time. Then they check in, listen, and see if they can do anything to help.”

Within the ambitious vision of “Stadt des Miteinanders,” Tulln has already experimented intensively in recent years with various digital channels, including Facebook, WhatsApp, and local initiatives such as FragNebenan. Although these platforms generated a certain reach, the municipality ran into structural limits that hindered further growth.

The experiences from previous pilots brought several clear bottlenecks to light:

  • Fragmentation and bubbles: Interaction often remained limited to small, closed circles (“us-knows-us”) or conversely diluted into large, impersonal groups.
  • Lack of depth: It proved difficult to conduct a meaningful dialogue via fleeting social media, both among residents themselves and between the citizen and the city administration.
  • Commercial communication: Local platforms often became more of a local advertising channel, rather than a place where neighbours can consult each other, ask questions, and organize exchanges.
  • Privacy concerns: There was growing resistance against ‘Big Tech’. Both the administration and the citizens were looking for an alternative to commercial, American platforms driven by data sales.

The choice for Hoplr was therefore a conscious strategic move to address these specific pain points. The municipality sought an independent, safe, and European alternative. A platform that transcends fragmentation by connecting neighbours geographically, and that offers an ad-free environment where trust in each other and in the local government is central.

“Hoplr has proven to be a very suitable tool that fills a gap: it is a secure and closed platform for our citizens. With it, we can foster community spirit and thereby achieve a steering effect for the benefit of the community.”

Mayor Peter Eisenschenk

The Test: Ease of Use for the Administration

For the municipality itself, it was crucial that the platform not only works to connect citizens but can also be deployed efficiently for the administration. During a two-month pilot, the communication service of Tulln an der Donau extensively tested the Hoplr dashboard and all functionalities.

The feedback from the administration was clear. The platform was perceived as user-friendly and straightforward to use. Additionally, the tools for targeted communication with specific neighbourhoods were labeled as very valuable, especially in a municipality that focuses on engaging its citizens.

“From a communications perspective, it is very helpful to be able to target information to specific neighbourhoods – for example, regarding local road closures – while simultaneously having the option to address everyone, for example, when announcing an event.”

Julia Schwanzer, Public Relations of the City of Tulln

The pilot confirmed that Hoplr can seamlessly integrate into the daily operations of a government service outside the Benelux, without heavy learning curves.

The Numbers: 300 Neighbours, One Community

Technical tools are one thing, but do the residents embrace it? To test this, Hoplr was launched in one specific neighbourhood in Tulln. Residents were invited via our proven invitation letter, and the response exceeded expectations.

“It was important to us to emphasize the feeling of community right from the app’s launch. Therefore, we decided to encourage all citizens to use the app with a personal letter from the mayor – with great success.”

Stefanie Jirgal, operational manager of the initiative “Stadt des Miteinanders”

The results of the pilot in figures:

  • Rapid adoption: Over 300 households signed up to participate in the test, which is no less than 22% of the total.
  • High engagement: As many as 60% of users contributed actively. This was not limited to ‘lurking’: people posted messages, responded to each other, gave ‘likes’, and used the chat function.
  • Impressive retention: Over the first four weeks of the pilot, we saw over 90% of users return to the app. Even after the initial novelty wore off, 60% continued to log in every week.

The Voice of the Citizen: Safety and Connection First

What the pilot in Tulln mainly proves is that the need for a safe, local network is cross-border. The user experiences are overwhelmingly positive: with an average recommendation score of 8.4 out of 10, 85% of surveyed residents believing Hoplr should also be launched in other neighbourhoods in Tulln, and barely any demand for technical support (1.4%), Hoplr passes the test in this new market with flying colors.

Residents embrace the platform not only for its ease of use but – as evidenced by the open feedback – explicitly view it as a ‘sensible European alternative’ to the large commercial players. This confirms that our core values regarding privacy and neighbourhood orientation also align perfectly internationally with what citizens and local governments are looking for today.

“I find it enormously important that this app exists! People need a sensible, European alternative to Facebook and Instagram.

 Feedback from a resident of Tulln via the survey

Numbers, however, only tell half the story; the real gain lies in the connections made. The survey shows that as many as more than one in three users (36%) made contact via the app with neighbours they did not know before. Even more: these digital interactions are not limited to the screen but lead to real meetings and neighbourhood help. One resident even aptly described the app in the survey as:

“A gift that makes Tulln an even more livable city”.

 Feedback from a resident of Tulln via the survey

It shows that in Austria too, Hoplr is not merely a communication channel, but a catalyst that directly and measurably strengthens the social fabric of the neighbourhoods.

Conclusion: Ready for Further Internationalization

The pilot in Tulln an der Donau proves that the Hoplr model is scalable and internationally relevant. Whether in Belgium, the Netherlands, or Austria: people have a need for connection in their immediate living environment.

With this successful case in our pocket, we look to the future with confidence. Hoplr is ready to support cities and municipalities in other European regions in their ambition to make neighbourhoods more social, caring, and safe.