Bridging the Digital Divide:

Similar documents
Technology Trends for Government

Source: REUTERS/Reinhard Krause

Digitalisation as day-to-day-business

immersive visualization workflow

Positioning Libraries in the Digital Preservation Landscape

TTÜ infotehnoloogiateaduskond Informaatikainstituut. Enn Õunapuu Vanemteadur

Challenges and Opportunities

DIGITAL WITH PLYMOUTH UNIVERSITY DIGITAL STRATEGY

Performance indicators towards sustainability. Reporting framework for cities

Beyond BIM. Knowledge management for a smarter built environment. Shaun Howell and Yacine Rezgui

A manifesto for global sustainable health. Sustainable Health Symposium Cambridge, UK 25th July 2017

Visualizing the future of field service

Towards a high-quality Baukultur for Europe

Definitions and Application Areas

UNIT 2 TOPICS IN COMPUTER SCIENCE. Emerging Technologies and Society

Framework Programme 7

INDUSTRIE 4.0 INDUSTRIE 4.0. Automated Manufacturing istock.com/baran Ãzdemir

The Adoption of Appropriate Technology in Service Delivery in South Africa

SMART PLACES WHAT. WHY. HOW.

Information & Communication Technologies

Prototyping Future Smart City Forms

Responsible Data Use Policy Framework

Enhancing Shipboard Maintenance with Augmented Reality

DIGITAL TECHNOLOGIES FOR A BETTER WORLD. NanoPC HPC

Internet of Things. (Ref: Slideshare)

CARPEessence. Smart and Sustainable City Definitions

Making Canberra. A human-centered city. -charter-

Definitions of Ambient Intelligence

SMART DUBAI INSPIRING NEW REALITIES

Digitisation success on a shoestring? Scoping some issues in sustaining digital collections

Our increasingly digital world offers opportunities to transform the systems and services we rely on every day. For their take on the potential power

Disrupting our way to a Very Human City

Digital Disruption Thrive or Survive. Devendra Dhawale, August 10, 2018

Prof. Dr. Nathalie Crutzen Director. HEC Liège University of Liege (Belgium)

APEC Internet and Digital Economy Roadmap

2017/18 KEYNOTE OVERVIEW DIGITAL EVANGELIST PATTERN HUNTER TREND SPOTTER MEDIA COMMENTATOR STORY TELLER

technologies, Gigaom provides deep insight on the disruptive companies, people and technologies shaping the future for all of us.

BIM, CIM, IOT: the rapid rise of the new urban digitalism.

A European Energy Dialogue

Sustainable home heating practices Visions for 2050

LSCB Pan-Lancashire LSCB Online Safeguarding Strategy

Executive Summary FUTURE SYSTEMS. Thriving in a world of constant change

Situational Awareness A Missing DP Sensor output

The global leader in trusted identities for an increasingly digital world. Press kit September, 28 th 2017

University of Warwick March 2009

Concept Note 22 November 2018

what s really important? TRINITY FINANCIAL

Digital transformation in the Catalan public administrations

Leading the Agenda. Everyday technology: A focus group with children, young people and their carers

How do you teach AI the value of trust?

Non-ferrous metals manufacturing industry: vision for the future and actions needed

A SURVEY ON HCI IN SMART HOMES. Department of Electrical Engineering Michigan Technological University

Open Research Online The Open University s repository of research publications and other research outputs

Strategic Plan

AIEDAM Special Issue: Sketching, and Pen-based Design Interaction Edited by: Maria C. Yang and Levent Burak Kara

Input to the National Planning Framework Final Consultation. Ireland 2040: Our Plan

The perception of Belgian Cities and Communities on Smart Cities

Smart Glasses Adoption in Smart Tourism Destination: A Conceptual Model

Digital Transformation. The Challenge of Digitalization A How-To Guide. Copyright 2015 ScS Lüttgen All Rights reserved.

Getting the most out of smart homes & buildings: Measuring Value. Dr Martin Ganley Director, Smart Homes and Buildings BRE. Part of the BRE Trust

Interactive Architecture: Connecting and Animating the Built Environment with the Internet of Things

FUTURE NOW Securing Digital Success

UNESCO s Activity in Engineering, Science, and Technology for Poverty Reduction

Roadmap to Digital Transformation: Implications for Intelligence

Drafting I. IC61 Summer TRADE AND INDUSTRIAL EDUCATION Career and Technical Education

Seoul Initiative on the 4 th Industrial Revolution

TECHsummit & GadgetExpo Bratislava

What is Digital Literacy and Why is it Important?

Tackling Digital Exclusion: Counter Social Inequalities Through Digital Inclusion

The Programmable City Smarter Cities. Tuesday, 9 May 2017

NATIONAL TOURISM CONFERENCE 2018

Strategic Plan Approved by Council 7 June 2010

Draft Recommendation concerning the Protection and Promotion of Museums, their Diversity and their Role in Society

ITU Telecom World 2018 SMART ABC

Written response to the public consultation on the European Commission Green Paper: From

Un nuevo origen 7 tendencias claves. A New Origin: 7 Key Trends

The future of work. Artificial Intelligence series

Systems Engineering Transformation: Accelerating transformation to a model-based discipline

EMMA feedback and assessment tool

Manifesto. A Young People s. for the Digital Europe of Tomorrow. Future INTRODUCTION. Seeds for the

Open School Education 2030 Starting off

Integrating CFD, VR, AR and BIM for Design Feedback in a Design Process An Experimental Study

BIM & Emerging Technologies. Disrupting Design process & Construction

Architectural Robotics: Intelligent and Adaptable Built Environments

Smart City & Living 2016 Trend Report

Public Sector Future Scenarios

ADVANCING KNOWLEDGE. FOR CANADA S FUTURE Enabling excellence, building partnerships, connecting research to canadians SSHRC S STRATEGIC PLAN TO 2020

Forum on Lifelong Participation through Digital Technology: A summary report

IBI GROUP S TOP 10. Smart City Strategy Success Factors

Enabling a Smarter World. Dr. Joao Schwarz da Silva DG INFSO European Commission

Overview: Emerging Technologies and Issues

By Mark Hindsbo Vice President and General Manager, ANSYS

Smart cities: A human-centered approach Engineering and Construction Conference June 20 22, 2018

BATTELLE AND THE SMART CITY. Turning vision into reality for tomorrow s urban environments.

Emerging technology. Presentation by Dr Sudheer Singh Parwana 17th January 2019

Digital Engineering and Engineered Resilient Systems (ERS)

Workshop Future Ways of Living 3 Toronto, April 29 th May 7 th 2018

The Digital Divide. Factors that contribute towards widening the digital divide gap: Poverty. Education

Pattern-based Thinking for Interdisciplinary Urban Infrastructure Creation Keith Duddy, Simon Kaplan

3D Reality Documentation in Today s

Transcription:

Bridging the Digital Divide: Redefining the Concept of Sustainable Development for the Information Age A presentation by: Marco Macagnano Phd Pr. Arch Email: marco.m@bentel.net Bentel Associates International

The problem and its setting What is the Goal: Sustainable Development UN Brundlandt Report, 1972: The ability of an environment to meet the needs of current and future generations. The Triple Bottom Line

Since sustainability was coined as a concept, the world has changed

The Digital Revolution Unimagined access to information Economic, social and cultural change through transformed communication technologies and processes We are immersed in a digital economy Pervasive and ubiquitous Information and Communication technologies ICT is the enabler

The Digital Divide

The Digital Divide

Is the answer in ICTs? Technological Redundancy. Cellphones last 3 years but our buildings last 30 How are we empowered by technology?

Digital Technologies Access to Information Actionable Information Empowered Decision-making

The emergence of the knowledge-based society Knowledge transfer and preservation is the cornerstone to intergenerational equity people-centred, inclusive and development oriented information societies, where everyone can achieve their full potential in promoting sustainable development and improving their quality of life (World Summit of the Information Society, 2003) The Digital Divide is a barrier to knowledge

Tacit Explicit The goal is not technology, the goal is equity

Enabling the Knowledge-Based Society Shaped through interrogation of key criteria environment applicable to the context of implementation economy human SD need society knowledge

Revised Model for Sustainable Development in the Information Age

What kind of world are we inheriting?

Absence of knowledge integration increases the threat of AI and process automation

Implications on product and process

Implications on architectural product and process Digital emersion is as integral to our everyday lives as the roofs over our heads. Architecture and the built-environment no longer have the monopoly on shaping human-experience or guiding cultural interaction. Retroactive upgrading of our builtenvironments applying digital technologies to function better in spite of our buildings instead of because of them.

Implications on architectural product and process The Rise and Rise of Mobile Technology

Ushering in a future of convenience, centred around the individual

The number of tasks that can currently be executed primarily on a mobile phone

Mobile technology requires data. What are the implications on infrastructure? Percentage of households reliant solely on wireless data Wireless data usage based on income group

Where is the smart city taking us? Digital overlay of a city. Pervasive systems in place to create an interconnected digital and physical environment to enable smart-city living

Implications on architectural product and process The Rise and Rise of Wearable Technology (Augmented and Mixed Realities)

Mainstream augmented reality. Digital immersion shapes our environments to our specific wants and needs. Microsoft Hololens featured above

Architecture disappears into the background of an information based environment Microsoft Hololens featured above

Environments are experienced as a matter of perception. Solid state structure is replaced with fluid and flexible digital worlds. Microsoft Hololens featured above

Immersive learning becomes standard

Ubiquitous computing interacts with the physical city to create an information-based experience.

1. Are our cities part of the solution? 2. Where is the Architect / Urban Planner / Built Environment Professional in all of this?

Implications on product and process How: Custodians of the entire process: solutions not products Definition of appropriate sustainability criteria for the built environment Integration with information-based systems design: Building Information Modelling (BIM) Building lifecycle 5D Construction Embrace future flexibility form, function, infrastructure a building use might change, or might even become completely obsolete. Green or smart building does not necessitate its existence.

The goal is not to produce products, the goal is to produce integrated and sustainable systems.

Implications on product and process We embed information into everything we do. Humans are constantly plugged in. Our buildings are designed based on information modelling. Building management systems operate and monitor buildings on continuous feedback loop cycles. Yet we still insist on designing to a fixed moment in time with little to no consideration for what happens outside of our site boundaries.

A digitally connected world in design means that we can consider the impact of a project on its broader context

And also allows us to consider and respond to the individual flexibly, fluidly, and continuously

Our buildings need to plug-in to the digital context. The built environment must have a role as digital information enabler. The future sustainable environment requires recognition that the physical world is complemented by the digital world total systems integration The role of municipalities should therefore evolve from that of a fixedpoint approval of design, to that of constant oversight to include the digital landscape as a means to interrogate and better our physical environments. Information sharing in a knowledge-based society is key.

Quality of life The standard unit of measurement for successful built environments Digital connection Enabled through ubiquitous, knowledge-based interaction and enabling environments

The creation of a digital city, in unison with the physical. BIM-based avatars that are able to communicate in real time with a smart-city central management system to make real-world decisions. Neighbourhoods can be evaluated via quantifiable data such as building occupancy, economic activity, user comfort, happiness, etc.

Conclusion The future of sustainable built environments is therefore not achieved through isolation of approach. It requires an integrated systems-design approach. It is required to recognise that the job is not done when construction is complete, but rather that a building (and its stakeholders) remains a contributor to the greater sustainable context.

If we desire to change the world for the better, we must be willing to change with it.

Thank you A presentation by: Marco Macagnano PhD Pr. Arch Email: marco.m@bentel.net Bentel Associates International