Manifesto: Adrian Smith - Grassroots InnovationSTEPS Centre
The STEPS Centre Symposium, 26 September 2009, focused on our Innovation, Sustainability, Development: A New Manifesto project. This presentation by STEPS member Adrian Smith was one of those given at the event. For more information see: www.anewmanifesto.org
Regions and innovation: collaborating across bordersOECD Governance
XIV All-Russian Forum «Strategic Planning in the Regions and Cities of Russia» 19 October 2015, St Petersburg, Russian Federation presentation by William Tompson, Senior Counsellor, OECD Regional Development Policy Division.
Promoting integrated development in the context of demographic changeOECD Governance
Presentation on promoting integrated development at the XIV All-Russian Forum "Strategic Planning in the Regions and Cities of Russia", 19-20 October 2015, St Petersburg,, Russian Federation, by William Tompson, Senior Counsellor, OECD Regional Development Policy Division.
St Petersburg, 19 October 2015
Manifesto: Adrian Smith - Grassroots InnovationSTEPS Centre
The STEPS Centre Symposium, 26 September 2009, focused on our Innovation, Sustainability, Development: A New Manifesto project. This presentation by STEPS member Adrian Smith was one of those given at the event. For more information see: www.anewmanifesto.org
Regions and innovation: collaborating across bordersOECD Governance
XIV All-Russian Forum «Strategic Planning in the Regions and Cities of Russia» 19 October 2015, St Petersburg, Russian Federation presentation by William Tompson, Senior Counsellor, OECD Regional Development Policy Division.
Promoting integrated development in the context of demographic changeOECD Governance
Presentation on promoting integrated development at the XIV All-Russian Forum "Strategic Planning in the Regions and Cities of Russia", 19-20 October 2015, St Petersburg,, Russian Federation, by William Tompson, Senior Counsellor, OECD Regional Development Policy Division.
St Petersburg, 19 October 2015
Presentation by Ron Wetmore (Vice President, Exploration Systems, Lockheed martin) at the Von Braun Memorial Symposium in Huntsville, Alabama, 22 October 2008.
<a href="http://astronautical.org/vonbraun/vonbraun-2008/session5">http://astronautical.org/vonbraun/vonbraun-2008/session5</a>
The role of local engagement in delivering city logistic innovationsGruppo CLAS
Relazione presentata nel corso di URBE (URban freight and BEhavior change) organizzata dal Dipartimento di Scienze politiche e dal Centro di Ricerca sull'Economia delle Istituzioni (CREI) dell'Università di Roma Tre l'1 e 2 ottobre 2015.
The work provides an overview on engagement approaches tested and performed in different urban contexts, in order to foster stakeholder participation to the debate on urban freight, and on methods to identify commons solutions and develop viable models.
The analysis considers the experience of cities where initiatives related with urban freight deliveries are being planned and implemented, and where local engagement strategies have been put in place in order to identify issues and common viable and accepted solutions.
A presentation delivered in Brussels on 13th february 2017 International Evidence Review 'Experimenting with Urban Living Labs (ULLs) beyond Smart City-Regions'
On 13 February 2017, the Urban Transformations programme, funded by the Economic and Social Research Council (ESRC), brought together a range of academics and practitioners from across Europe for a knowledge exchange event on urban living labs and smart cities. The University of Oxford convened the event, working with the European Regions Research & Innovation Network (ERRIN) and the workshop took place at one of ERRIN’s members, the Delegation of the Basque Country to the EU. This was the second in a series entitled Bridging European Urban Transformations established in partnership with the VUB (Vrije Universiteit Brussel) and its Brussels Centre for Urban Studies. In this post-Brexit era, cooperation across borders and disciplines seems more important than ever before. Consequently the series, which runs from November 2016 to October 2017, emphasises the value of connections between institutions and key players in the field of urban transformations in the UK and in the rest of Europe.
A presentation on Intelligent City-Regions: Raising Capacities for Policy-Making. From an event at the royal society for the arts, RSA on From National ‘Cities’ Policies to Local ‘City-Region’ Policy: Next Steps for the UK.
The MA in Digital Humanities at King's College London looks at how we create and disseminate knowledge in an age where so much of what we do is mobile, networked and mediated by digital culture and technology
It gives a critical perspective on digital theory and practice in studying human culture, from the perspectives of academic scholarship, cultural heritage and the commercial world
We study the history and current state of the digital humanities, and their role in modelling, curating, analysing and interpreting digital representations of human culture in all its forms.
For more information: http://www.kcl.ac.uk/artshums/depts/ddh/study/pgt/madh/index.aspx
SS21. Beyond Smart & Data-Driven City-Regions?
Rethinking Stakeholder-Helixes Strategies
Session organiser(s)
Paul Cowie, Future Cities Catapult, UK: paul.cowie@newcastlel.ac.uk
Igor Calzada, Unviversity of Oxford, UK: igor.calzada@compas.ox.ac.uk
Smart City-Regions and Smart Specialisation Strategies (S3) are now driving significant policy development in city regions in Europe. However, the ‘smartness’ in these strategies is dominated by a technological hegemonic understanding of the city region. The discourse is centred on knowledge flows and data aggregation which allows the city-region to modelled and managed.
At the same time, territorial innovation models such as the triple/quadruple/penta-helix models also seek to understand the city-region as a system of knowledge flows between stakeholders. In this case, stakeholders’ interdependencies and their social and culturally rooted practices are just as important as the data and technical knowledge itself. Indeed, the role of institutions seems to be strategically substantial in order to foster ecosystems of experimentation engaging not only the public sector, private sector and academia but also civic society, social entrepreneurs and activists.
There is a growing critique of the more technocratic smart city strategies. The early pioneers in the field have not always delivered on their promise. There is also a growing challenge to the discourse that sees cities as machines, corporations or biological systems that can be broken down into their component parts and understood.
Hence, there is a gap therefore between the objective city to be found in many of the technocratic data driven solutions to the problems faced by city regions and the subjective city to be found in the everyday experience of the citizens of city-regions.
This special session is therefore seeking papers from academics and practitioners working at the frontier between the subjective and objective city-regional configurations in Europe. We would like to stimulate critical governance debate that challenges some of the assumptions and norms embedded in smart city-region strategies and suggest ways in which the divide between subjective and objective city-region can be bridged by different models capturing stakeholders interactions such as those so-called stakeholder-helixes strategies.
Submission guidelines
Please submit proposals for papers in the form of a 250 word abstract (text only) through the Regional Studies Association conference portal by Friday 24th February 2017. Proposals will be considered by the Conference Programme Committee against the criteria of originality, interest and subject balance.
http://https://members.regionalstudies.org/lounge/Meetings/Meeting?ID=149
The concept of knowledge-based urban development has first come to the urban planning and development agenda during the very last years of the 20th century as a promising paradigm to support the transformation process of cities into knowledge cities and their societies into knowledge societies
Drawing Futures Together. Diagrams for the Design of Scenarios of Liveable Ci...serena pollastri
Presentation for RSD3 symposium - October 2014, AHO Oslo.
Proceedings will soon be available here: http://systemic-design.net/
Abstract:
This work introduces an ongoing research project that seeks to develop appropriate visual techniques for the design of future scenarios that are able to capture interdependencies within and across different systems. These design methods are being explored as part of a wider research on the future of cities and sustainable urban living.
The issue of cities as complex systems has been explored by a considerable amount of literature, across different disciplines (for example, Simmel, 1971; Lynch, 1960; Jacobs, 1992; Abrams and Hall, 2004). Cities are not only defined by buildings and infrastructure, but also by the material and immaterial flows generated by the activities that take place in the urban environment, as well as the personal experience of its inhabitants
Environmental, social, and economic challenges call for actions of radical interventions in modern urban areas. In order to be truly sustainable these actions must be collaboratively developed in trans-disciplinary sessions. Here, people from various backgrounds and with different interests explore alternative solutions, find a common ground and plan concrete actions towards a desirable future (Holman et al., 2007).
One of the challenges of this approach is to find effective ways to visualize how individual solutions impact on the context in which they are implemented, and how they relate to each other. There is a need to develop “means for drawing things together” (Bruno Latour, 2008), a common language to describe complexity and allow hidden interdependencies to emerge. The field of information visualization is rich with examples of how diagrams can be used to describe a complex matter by focusing primarily on the relations between different sets of qualitative and quantitative data. Drawing on Deleuze philosophical interpretation, Scagnetti (2007) describes diagrams as “operating devices able to reveal weak links among the elements of the system, and to show the driving forces that can facilitate (or hinder) a design intervention.” In this context diagrams are processes rather than finished products: they are working tools for design and decision making.
This paper describes how this diagrammatic approach to city visualization is being adopted in different case studies, and as part of the Liveable Cities project.
Liveable Cities is an interdisciplinary research project that aims to develop a method of designing and engineering low-carbon, resource-secure UK cities that do not compromise on individual and collective wellbeing. Different areas of the project are investigated by research teams at Lancaster University, University of Southampton, UCL, and Birmingham University, with the help of expert panelists, partners and potential users of future services. Great impo
Presentation at 2013 World Summit on the Information Society multistakeholder review event (WSIS+10)
UNESCO, Paris, 25-27 February 2013
ISSC Session: Critical Social Sciences in the Digital Age
Presentation by Ron Wetmore (Vice President, Exploration Systems, Lockheed martin) at the Von Braun Memorial Symposium in Huntsville, Alabama, 22 October 2008.
<a href="http://astronautical.org/vonbraun/vonbraun-2008/session5">http://astronautical.org/vonbraun/vonbraun-2008/session5</a>
The role of local engagement in delivering city logistic innovationsGruppo CLAS
Relazione presentata nel corso di URBE (URban freight and BEhavior change) organizzata dal Dipartimento di Scienze politiche e dal Centro di Ricerca sull'Economia delle Istituzioni (CREI) dell'Università di Roma Tre l'1 e 2 ottobre 2015.
The work provides an overview on engagement approaches tested and performed in different urban contexts, in order to foster stakeholder participation to the debate on urban freight, and on methods to identify commons solutions and develop viable models.
The analysis considers the experience of cities where initiatives related with urban freight deliveries are being planned and implemented, and where local engagement strategies have been put in place in order to identify issues and common viable and accepted solutions.
A presentation delivered in Brussels on 13th february 2017 International Evidence Review 'Experimenting with Urban Living Labs (ULLs) beyond Smart City-Regions'
On 13 February 2017, the Urban Transformations programme, funded by the Economic and Social Research Council (ESRC), brought together a range of academics and practitioners from across Europe for a knowledge exchange event on urban living labs and smart cities. The University of Oxford convened the event, working with the European Regions Research & Innovation Network (ERRIN) and the workshop took place at one of ERRIN’s members, the Delegation of the Basque Country to the EU. This was the second in a series entitled Bridging European Urban Transformations established in partnership with the VUB (Vrije Universiteit Brussel) and its Brussels Centre for Urban Studies. In this post-Brexit era, cooperation across borders and disciplines seems more important than ever before. Consequently the series, which runs from November 2016 to October 2017, emphasises the value of connections between institutions and key players in the field of urban transformations in the UK and in the rest of Europe.
A presentation on Intelligent City-Regions: Raising Capacities for Policy-Making. From an event at the royal society for the arts, RSA on From National ‘Cities’ Policies to Local ‘City-Region’ Policy: Next Steps for the UK.
The MA in Digital Humanities at King's College London looks at how we create and disseminate knowledge in an age where so much of what we do is mobile, networked and mediated by digital culture and technology
It gives a critical perspective on digital theory and practice in studying human culture, from the perspectives of academic scholarship, cultural heritage and the commercial world
We study the history and current state of the digital humanities, and their role in modelling, curating, analysing and interpreting digital representations of human culture in all its forms.
For more information: http://www.kcl.ac.uk/artshums/depts/ddh/study/pgt/madh/index.aspx
SS21. Beyond Smart & Data-Driven City-Regions?
Rethinking Stakeholder-Helixes Strategies
Session organiser(s)
Paul Cowie, Future Cities Catapult, UK: paul.cowie@newcastlel.ac.uk
Igor Calzada, Unviversity of Oxford, UK: igor.calzada@compas.ox.ac.uk
Smart City-Regions and Smart Specialisation Strategies (S3) are now driving significant policy development in city regions in Europe. However, the ‘smartness’ in these strategies is dominated by a technological hegemonic understanding of the city region. The discourse is centred on knowledge flows and data aggregation which allows the city-region to modelled and managed.
At the same time, territorial innovation models such as the triple/quadruple/penta-helix models also seek to understand the city-region as a system of knowledge flows between stakeholders. In this case, stakeholders’ interdependencies and their social and culturally rooted practices are just as important as the data and technical knowledge itself. Indeed, the role of institutions seems to be strategically substantial in order to foster ecosystems of experimentation engaging not only the public sector, private sector and academia but also civic society, social entrepreneurs and activists.
There is a growing critique of the more technocratic smart city strategies. The early pioneers in the field have not always delivered on their promise. There is also a growing challenge to the discourse that sees cities as machines, corporations or biological systems that can be broken down into their component parts and understood.
Hence, there is a gap therefore between the objective city to be found in many of the technocratic data driven solutions to the problems faced by city regions and the subjective city to be found in the everyday experience of the citizens of city-regions.
This special session is therefore seeking papers from academics and practitioners working at the frontier between the subjective and objective city-regional configurations in Europe. We would like to stimulate critical governance debate that challenges some of the assumptions and norms embedded in smart city-region strategies and suggest ways in which the divide between subjective and objective city-region can be bridged by different models capturing stakeholders interactions such as those so-called stakeholder-helixes strategies.
Submission guidelines
Please submit proposals for papers in the form of a 250 word abstract (text only) through the Regional Studies Association conference portal by Friday 24th February 2017. Proposals will be considered by the Conference Programme Committee against the criteria of originality, interest and subject balance.
http://https://members.regionalstudies.org/lounge/Meetings/Meeting?ID=149
The concept of knowledge-based urban development has first come to the urban planning and development agenda during the very last years of the 20th century as a promising paradigm to support the transformation process of cities into knowledge cities and their societies into knowledge societies
Drawing Futures Together. Diagrams for the Design of Scenarios of Liveable Ci...serena pollastri
Presentation for RSD3 symposium - October 2014, AHO Oslo.
Proceedings will soon be available here: http://systemic-design.net/
Abstract:
This work introduces an ongoing research project that seeks to develop appropriate visual techniques for the design of future scenarios that are able to capture interdependencies within and across different systems. These design methods are being explored as part of a wider research on the future of cities and sustainable urban living.
The issue of cities as complex systems has been explored by a considerable amount of literature, across different disciplines (for example, Simmel, 1971; Lynch, 1960; Jacobs, 1992; Abrams and Hall, 2004). Cities are not only defined by buildings and infrastructure, but also by the material and immaterial flows generated by the activities that take place in the urban environment, as well as the personal experience of its inhabitants
Environmental, social, and economic challenges call for actions of radical interventions in modern urban areas. In order to be truly sustainable these actions must be collaboratively developed in trans-disciplinary sessions. Here, people from various backgrounds and with different interests explore alternative solutions, find a common ground and plan concrete actions towards a desirable future (Holman et al., 2007).
One of the challenges of this approach is to find effective ways to visualize how individual solutions impact on the context in which they are implemented, and how they relate to each other. There is a need to develop “means for drawing things together” (Bruno Latour, 2008), a common language to describe complexity and allow hidden interdependencies to emerge. The field of information visualization is rich with examples of how diagrams can be used to describe a complex matter by focusing primarily on the relations between different sets of qualitative and quantitative data. Drawing on Deleuze philosophical interpretation, Scagnetti (2007) describes diagrams as “operating devices able to reveal weak links among the elements of the system, and to show the driving forces that can facilitate (or hinder) a design intervention.” In this context diagrams are processes rather than finished products: they are working tools for design and decision making.
This paper describes how this diagrammatic approach to city visualization is being adopted in different case studies, and as part of the Liveable Cities project.
Liveable Cities is an interdisciplinary research project that aims to develop a method of designing and engineering low-carbon, resource-secure UK cities that do not compromise on individual and collective wellbeing. Different areas of the project are investigated by research teams at Lancaster University, University of Southampton, UCL, and Birmingham University, with the help of expert panelists, partners and potential users of future services. Great impo
Presentation at 2013 World Summit on the Information Society multistakeholder review event (WSIS+10)
UNESCO, Paris, 25-27 February 2013
ISSC Session: Critical Social Sciences in the Digital Age
Designing Futures to Flourish: ISSS 2015 keynotePeter Jones
We now find ourselves as a systems thinking community inquiring into planetary governance for climate and ecological politics. The Anthropocene demands a planetary response, and yet we often find even our fellow travelers tethered to discourses of technological management, cultural change, and right action. We might now advocate a stronger role for social systems design as a process for continual engagement of citizen stakeholders, and between these citizens and policy makers, as advocated by Christakis, Ulrich and others. As we have seen power (economic and political) separate from its cultural histories, and become globalized, we may find ourselves in trajectories of action but with marginal power to effect societal outcomes.
We are faced with a dual mandate of restorative system design, recovering human needs in our communities, and policy system design, restoring the long historical arc toward democratic governance. And as these are both designable contexts, systemic design can integrate ecological, technological and design thinking to guide policy in more productive ways.
• We find ourselves captured in the politics of solutionism. Most presentations of the “problems” as stated before us reveal a trajectory of preferred solutions and their possible shortcomings.
• Climate change, even the entire Anthropocene aeonic perspective, represents a problematique of multiple effects systems. We are bound up in political discourses of “system change” and do not share a compelling common view of a flourishing world. We seem unable to reregister the most compelling societal choices and drivers save carbon mitigation.
• We have not conducted, to my knowledge, a substantial stakeholder discovery that extends beyond the immediate and obvious primary combatants in the climate change wars.
• As citizens and political actors on the planetary stage, we have been afraid or unable to present a clear view of the risk scenarios, possible governance strategies, or a normative plan for serious global investment. If the planet were a business concern, it would be in receivership by now.
Dr Igor Calzada, MBA, presents the paper 'Comparing Smart City-Regional Governance Strategies in Bristol, Glasgow, Bilbao & Barcelona' at the University of Oxford on 18th Feb 2016.
Paper presented as a movie to the 2011 Univeristy of North Carolina student study tour organised by the Department of Information Studies, University College London. addition links and references can be found at http://tinyurl.com/69czo4t
By 20th June 2014, Dr Calzada (Future of Cities & COMPAS) and Dr Cobo (OII) from the University of Oxford have held a Workshop titled: #Unplugging > Beyond Hyper-Connected Societies that will take place at The Oxford Research Centre in Humanities in Oxford (UK) from 13:00-16:00.
The article #Unplugging > Deconstructing the Smart City by the two authors is forthcoming.
Small Worlds of Ambridge: Power, Networks & Actants Nicola Headlam
Seeking to explore the ways in which multi-dimensional power may be deployed within a spatially defined place needs an interrogation of place-based statecraft. The paper presents some of the forms of capital in play in Ambridge mapped using Social Network Analysis (SNA) It argues that the extant matriarchal structure of Aldridges/Archers can be challenged by Kinship structures emphasising the weak ties, or hinges between the major cliques/clans and that within the knowledge economy Ed's multiple contractual connections make him 'King of Ambridge'
Have you ever wondered how search works while visiting an e-commerce site, internal website, or searching through other types of online resources? Look no further than this informative session on the ways that taxonomies help end-users navigate the internet! Hear from taxonomists and other information professionals who have first-hand experience creating and working with taxonomies that aid in navigation, search, and discovery across a range of disciplines.
This presentation, created by Syed Faiz ul Hassan, explores the profound influence of media on public perception and behavior. It delves into the evolution of media from oral traditions to modern digital and social media platforms. Key topics include the role of media in information propagation, socialization, crisis awareness, globalization, and education. The presentation also examines media influence through agenda setting, propaganda, and manipulative techniques used by advertisers and marketers. Furthermore, it highlights the impact of surveillance enabled by media technologies on personal behavior and preferences. Through this comprehensive overview, the presentation aims to shed light on how media shapes collective consciousness and public opinion.
Acorn Recovery: Restore IT infra within minutesIP ServerOne
Introducing Acorn Recovery as a Service, a simple, fast, and secure managed disaster recovery (DRaaS) by IP ServerOne. A DR solution that helps restore your IT infra within minutes.
0x01 - Newton's Third Law: Static vs. Dynamic AbusersOWASP Beja
f you offer a service on the web, odds are that someone will abuse it. Be it an API, a SaaS, a PaaS, or even a static website, someone somewhere will try to figure out a way to use it to their own needs. In this talk we'll compare measures that are effective against static attackers and how to battle a dynamic attacker who adapts to your counter-measures.
About the Speaker
===============
Diogo Sousa, Engineering Manager @ Canonical
An opinionated individual with an interest in cryptography and its intersection with secure software development.
This presentation by Morris Kleiner (University of Minnesota), was made during the discussion “Competition and Regulation in Professions and Occupations” held at the Working Party No. 2 on Competition and Regulation on 10 June 2024. More papers and presentations on the topic can be found out at oe.cd/crps.
This presentation was uploaded with the author’s consent.
Sharpen existing tools or get a new toolbox? Contemporary cluster initiatives...Orkestra
UIIN Conference, Madrid, 27-29 May 2024
James Wilson, Orkestra and Deusto Business School
Emily Wise, Lund University
Madeline Smith, The Glasgow School of Art
2. Key Question
WHAT is the innovative institutional
form/platform at the city (-regional)
scale which
– Enables collective learning processes
– Materialises “cognitive surplus”
– Manifests different circuits of credibility
– Harnesses capacity to work differently
• in/on/with place
• with a spatial and long-term focus
4. Collective learning
The meeting of knowledge and the city is a fertile
ground for recombining the biological, cultural and
political endowment of humankind. Beyond the
dominance intentions and internal contradictions of
globalism, the planetary knowledge societies of the
21st century will have the possibility for the first time
in human history to consciously and systematically
develop coexistent rules and systems based primarily
on represented realities or knowledge capitals. This
may mean an evolutionary leapfrog will be required to
overcome the huge environmental, energy, resources,
demographic, financial, sociopolitical and cultural
crises that we are just beginning to unleash.
Carillo et al. (2014) pg 271 Knowledge Markets and Urban Transformation chapter 8 of Knowledge and the City :
Concepts, Applications and Trends of Knowledge-Based Urban Development : Routledge
9. Place-based
• Research of/on place
• Research for/with
• Civic mission and partnerships
• Multi-layered
• “fast” and “slow”
• Graft and grow – not cut and paste
10. Building on…
• “Quadruple Helix” working @ sub-
national scale
• Foresight Future of Cities
• Urban claims regarding impactful
urban research (REF2014 cases)
• Draft paper on co-production (process
across UT/FOC in Autumn 2014)
• “Smart client” implications…
11. Models (1)
• ENOLL / UK Living labs / Other living
labs
• Carnegie Mellon Model for engaged
university
• Regeneration improvement networks
• The future cities catapult
• Transition towns / Participatory
budgeting
• Community planning partnerships
• Urban rooms Farrell Review
12. Models (2)
• Boston Urban Mechanics Lab
• BMW Guggenheim labs
• Playable cities
• Global Exchange Festival NYC
• Conventional spin-outs
• Transeuropa
13. Explore & Discuss
HOW (with whom?) can we people such
a structure?
• With what capabilities?
• Using what tools?
• With what circuits of reward
• within and beyond universities?
14. Table Task
Discuss HOW to co-produce urban
research for the future
Suggest models or examples of working
with policy and across boundaries for and
with places
Reflect on policy insights possible
16. introduction
Fellowship 2015/16
Urban Transformations and
Foresight Future of Cities 2065
Knowledge Exchange Research Fellow
COMPAS, University of Oxford host
GO-Science (BIS) sponsor
ESRC (Research Council) funder
17. introduction
1. research fields, scanning academic
disciplines and the state of the art
2. developing research agenda on the
future of the city
3. networking links and knowledge
mobilisation
4. influencing emergent networks
18.
19. What is Foresight 2065?
- Working Papers (16)
- Lead Expert Group (28 meetings)
- Civil servant support @1VCS
- Local projects with unis and without
- Special interest groups
- CSAG
20. What is Foresight 2065?
- Working Papers (16)
- Lead Expert Group
- Civil servant support @1VS
- Local projects with unis and without
- Special interest groups
- CSAG
21. National Foresight
Foresight City
Network
City Pilots
City Vision
Community
Newcastle:
Report
Complete
Cardiff:
Just Starting
Manchester:
Report
Complete
Liverpool:
Complete
London:
UCL city leadership
Devolution
Agenda/Societal
Challenges
Foresight
Working Papers
•Rochdale
•Bristol
•Milton Keynes
•Belfast
•Birmingham
•Cambridge
•Derby
•Derry/
Londonderry
•Edinburgh
•Glasgow
•Lancaster
•Leeds
•Leicester
•London
•Nottingham
•Oxford
•Reading
•Sheffield
Other future
city/region initiatives
• Northern Powerhouse
• Catapult – Future Cities
• ESRC Urban Transformations
• Etc……….