The Programmable City Smarter Cities. Tuesday, 9 May 2017

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Transcription:

The Programmable City Smarter Cities Tuesday, 9 May 2017

Welcome Muiris de Buitleir

Agenda Welcome Muiris de Buitleir Data-driven urbanism and urban planning Dr Rob Kitchin Q&A Closing Remarks Muiris de Buitleir

Data-Driven Urbanism and Urban Planning Dr. Rob Kitchin National University of Ireland, Maynooth

Data-driven urbanism and urban planning Rob Kitchin National University of Ireland Maynooth @robkitchin

Smart city technologies Domain Government Security and emergency services Transport Energy Waste Environment Buildings Homes Civic Example technologies E-government systems; online transactions; city operating systems; performance management systems; urban dashboards Centralised control rooms; digital surveillance; predictive policing; coordinated emergency response Intelligent transport systems; integrated ticketing; smart travel cards; bikeshare; real-time passenger information; smart parking; logistics management; transport apps Smart grids; smart meters; energy usage apps; smart lighting Compactor bins and dynamic routing/collection Sensor networks (e.g., pollution, noise, weather; land movement; flood management) Building management systems; sensor networks Smart meters; app controlled smart appliances Various apps; open data; volunteered data/hacks

Urban big data Directed o Surveillance: CCTV, drones/satellite o Public admin records Automated o Automated surveillance o Digital devices o Sensors, actuators, transponders, meters (IoT) o Interactions and transactions Volunteered o Social media o Sousveillance/wearables o Crowdsourcing o Citizen science

Urban big data Diverse range of public and private generation of fine-scale (uniquely indexical) data about citizens and places in realtime: utilities transport providers, logistics systems environmental agencies mobile phone operators app developers social media sites travel and accommodation websites home appliances and entertainment systems financial institutions and retail chains private surveillance and security firms remote sensing, aerial surveying emergency services Producing a data deluge that can be combined, analyzed, acted upon

Single domains

Integrated, city & sector wide

Networked, programmable, data-driven cities

www.dublindashboard.ie

Smart city apps

Promise of smart urbanism/cities Smart economy entrepreneurship, innovation, productivity, competiveness Smart environment green energy, sustainability, resilience Smart Cities Smart mobility intelligent transport systems, multi-modal interop, efficiency Smart people more informed, creativity, inclusivity, empowerment, participation Smart living quality of life, safety, security, manage risk Smart government e-gov, open data, transparency, accountability, evidence-informed decision making, better service delivery

Promise of smart urbanism/cities Smart economy entrepreneurship, innovation, productivity, competiveness Smart environment green energy, sustainability, resilience Smart Planning? Smart mobility intelligent transport systems, multi-modal interop, efficiency Smart people more informed, creativity, inclusivity, empowerment, participation Smart living quality of life, safety, security, manage risk Smart government e-gov, open data, transparency, accountability, evidence-informed decision making, better service delivery

Opportunities Short term planning & operation Inform local planning decisions and consider likely outcomes Monitor & track impact of interventions vs targets Guide on-going interventions into city systems New traffic calming measures, new street layouts, etc. Long term city & spatial planning Guide local and regional area plans Inform long-term master planning Testbedding Prototyping, experimenting, piloting, trialling

New data Planning traditionally data-informed framework data; public administration and infrastructure data; official statistical data; scientific data; consultative data; derived data Smart city technologies complementing these data with: operational data; IoT data; crowdsourced data; locative and social media data Real-time, very large samples, larger spatial/temporal coverage, actual rather than reported values

Civic engagement Worker engagement Crowdsourcing of issues & problems Crowdsourcing opinion & feedback Gaming/scenario tools Citizen-informed & participatory planning tools New engagement tools

New analysis tools Extend traditional methods of GIS, descriptive stats, modelling, qualitative analysis, policy analysis, etc. Visualisation/visual analytics Machine learning, pattern recognition, data mining Analytic and spatial stats Modelling, simulation, optimisation Sentiment/discourse analysis

Interactive maps Dashboards Apps Open data sites Interactive display screens New information tools

Instrumental concerns Epistemological questions Framing of cities Operation of governance Scalar and stakeholder issues Ethical concerns Normative questions Issues/challenges

Cities From a smart city perspective a city: is a set of knowable and manageable systems that act in rational, mechanical, linear & hierarchical ways can be steered & controlled through technical levers urban issues can be solved with technical solutions is a generic analytical category However, cities: are complex and ever-evolving, full of inter-dependent, contingent and relational actors, actants, processes and relationships culture, politics, competing interests and wicked problems difficult to predict & develop in capricious ways have different histories, cultures, economies, politics, legacy infrastructures, political and administrative geographies, interconnections and interdependencies with other places Need planning to have a nuanced, relational understanding of cities

Governance & planning Smart city technologies generally enact algorithmic & KPI-driven governance and forms of automated management. These: facilitate and produce instrumental, functionalist, technocratic, topdown forms of governance & government, inc. planning Underpinned by ethos of stewartship (for citizens) or civic paternalism (what s best for citizens) Often provide sticking plaster or work around solutions, rather than tackling root & structural causes Needs: co-creation, co-production, citizen engagement be open and transparent in their formulation and operation be used in conjunction with a suite of aligned interventions, policies and investments that seek to tackle issues in complementary ways Need to be set within wider long-term plan/vision for the city by the city

Scalar and stakeholder issues Fractured landscape With respect to geography Back-to-back services and planning across municipalities Scalar organisation local, county, regional, state, federal Mismatch of functional territories and administrative geographies With respect to stakeholders Within municipalities, across municipalities, with public sector agencies, industry, universities, NGOs, community organisations Different goals, resources, practices, institutional structures, funding models, etc. Variations in data ontologies within and between scales/stakeholders Lack of joined up smart city systems Sub-optimal planning

Goals Normative questions For whom and what purpose are smart cities being developed? Are smart cities primarily about or should be about: creating new markets and profit? facilitating state control and regulation? improving the quality of life of citizens? What kind of cities do we want to create and live in? Not simply from an instrumental perspective, but with respect to issues such as fairness, equity, justice, citizenship, democracy, governance and political economy What is the role of planning in smart city visions? Should the goal of planning be to create to smart cities? How should planning be practised in the era of smart urbanism?

Conclusions Cities around the world are increasingly utilising smart city technologies to solve urban issues Such technologies offer opportunities for urban planning and are reshaping planning praxes They also raise a number of practical, instrumental, conceptual, ethical and normative questions concerning planning theory and practice As the new era of smart urbanism emerges it is important for the planning profession to: reflect on these questions become proactive in answering them lead setting the agenda for urban and spatial planning in/for smart cities

Rob.Kitchin@nuim.ie @robkitchin https://www.maynoothuniversity.ie/people/rob-kitchin http://progcity.maynoothuniversity.ie @progcity

Q&A

Thank you