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The role of infrastructure in smart cities

Research output: Contribution to conference - Without ISBN/ISSN Conference paperpeer-review

Published

Standard

The role of infrastructure in smart cities. / Cavada, Marianna; Hunt, Dexter; Rogers, Christopher D.F. .
2017. 80-88 Paper presented at International Symposium for Next Generation Infrastructure 2017, London, United Kingdom.

Research output: Contribution to conference - Without ISBN/ISSN Conference paperpeer-review

Harvard

Cavada, M, Hunt, D & Rogers, CDF 2017, 'The role of infrastructure in smart cities', Paper presented at International Symposium for Next Generation Infrastructure 2017, London, United Kingdom, 11/09/17 - 13/09/17 pp. 80-88. <https://drive.google.com/file/d/1oY-5icPjzsL2OOHExA6VFYPuKqktjSZG/view>

APA

Cavada, M., Hunt, D., & Rogers, C. D. F. (2017). The role of infrastructure in smart cities. 80-88. Paper presented at International Symposium for Next Generation Infrastructure 2017, London, United Kingdom. https://drive.google.com/file/d/1oY-5icPjzsL2OOHExA6VFYPuKqktjSZG/view

Vancouver

Cavada M, Hunt D, Rogers CDF. The role of infrastructure in smart cities. 2017. Paper presented at International Symposium for Next Generation Infrastructure 2017, London, United Kingdom.

Author

Cavada, Marianna ; Hunt, Dexter ; Rogers, Christopher D.F. . / The role of infrastructure in smart cities. Paper presented at International Symposium for Next Generation Infrastructure 2017, London, United Kingdom.9 p.

Bibtex

@conference{c01b734c323f40ef845706058321a49e,
title = "The role of infrastructure in smart cities",
abstract = "The idea of {\textquoteleft}smart cities{\textquoteright} was initially introduced by corporations to provide technological solutions to overcome contemporary challenges. The semantics for smart cities{\textquoteright} lacks a coherent vision and the use of technology therein is currently under scrutiny for its {\textquoteleft}liveability{\textquoteright} qualities. Therefore, the conception(and then design) of infrastructure needs to focus on the philosophy of what is truly smart, necessitating the assessment of smartness of solutions in relation to liveable cities.As a result of the growing research base, there is an opportunity now to frame the role of infrastructure within the smart cities vision beyond the traditional meaning of the term – one that empowers infrastructure and offers opportunities for innovative outcomes related to openness, collaboration and delivery of smartness in cities. In this paper, smartness, as a holistic practice, is reflected through the initiatives that cities have adopted in order to become smart. It is, therefore, proposed that a smart dataset not only provides a benchmark for smart cities, but underpins a new set of criteria by which we can assess the efficacy of changes to urban systems and positively influence smart cities, leading to innovative solutions to current and future urban challenges. ",
author = "Marianna Cavada and Dexter Hunt and Rogers, {Christopher D.F.}",
year = "2017",
month = sep,
day = "11",
language = "English",
pages = "80--88",
note = "International Symposium for Next Generation Infrastructure 2017 : Infrastructure for a better future: a forum for vision, leadership and action ; Conference date: 11-09-2017 Through 13-09-2017",
url = "http://isngi.org/archive/",

}

RIS

TY - CONF

T1 - The role of infrastructure in smart cities

AU - Cavada, Marianna

AU - Hunt, Dexter

AU - Rogers, Christopher D.F.

PY - 2017/9/11

Y1 - 2017/9/11

N2 - The idea of ‘smart cities’ was initially introduced by corporations to provide technological solutions to overcome contemporary challenges. The semantics for smart cities’ lacks a coherent vision and the use of technology therein is currently under scrutiny for its ‘liveability’ qualities. Therefore, the conception(and then design) of infrastructure needs to focus on the philosophy of what is truly smart, necessitating the assessment of smartness of solutions in relation to liveable cities.As a result of the growing research base, there is an opportunity now to frame the role of infrastructure within the smart cities vision beyond the traditional meaning of the term – one that empowers infrastructure and offers opportunities for innovative outcomes related to openness, collaboration and delivery of smartness in cities. In this paper, smartness, as a holistic practice, is reflected through the initiatives that cities have adopted in order to become smart. It is, therefore, proposed that a smart dataset not only provides a benchmark for smart cities, but underpins a new set of criteria by which we can assess the efficacy of changes to urban systems and positively influence smart cities, leading to innovative solutions to current and future urban challenges.

AB - The idea of ‘smart cities’ was initially introduced by corporations to provide technological solutions to overcome contemporary challenges. The semantics for smart cities’ lacks a coherent vision and the use of technology therein is currently under scrutiny for its ‘liveability’ qualities. Therefore, the conception(and then design) of infrastructure needs to focus on the philosophy of what is truly smart, necessitating the assessment of smartness of solutions in relation to liveable cities.As a result of the growing research base, there is an opportunity now to frame the role of infrastructure within the smart cities vision beyond the traditional meaning of the term – one that empowers infrastructure and offers opportunities for innovative outcomes related to openness, collaboration and delivery of smartness in cities. In this paper, smartness, as a holistic practice, is reflected through the initiatives that cities have adopted in order to become smart. It is, therefore, proposed that a smart dataset not only provides a benchmark for smart cities, but underpins a new set of criteria by which we can assess the efficacy of changes to urban systems and positively influence smart cities, leading to innovative solutions to current and future urban challenges.

M3 - Conference paper

SP - 80

EP - 88

T2 - International Symposium for Next Generation Infrastructure 2017

Y2 - 11 September 2017 through 13 September 2017

ER -