6 lessons for city making by Raoul BunschotenEIT Climate-KIC
Raoul Bunschoten is an architect and urban planner specialised in dynamic masterplanning, Smart City Design, and participatory design processes and is director of CHORA Berlin. He is Professor of Sustainable Urban Planning and Urban Design at the Technical University Berlin and Chair of the CHORA Conscious City Institute. Raoul Bunschoten is co-lead of the Smart Sustainable Districts flagship project of EIT Climate KIC, a founding Professor of the Einstein Centre for Digital Futures, a joint initiative of the 5 leading Berlin Universities and the Senate of Berlin, and is the co-founder of the Smart Cities Platform at the TU Berlin. Raoul Bunschoten has founded the Conscious City Lab at the TUB, incorporating the former BrainBox planning support instrument, and has initiated the Intelligent Prefabrication project for City Making.
Classifying historical business directory data: issues of translation between...JISC GECO
Presentation given at the Geospatial in the Cultural Heritage Domain - Past, Present & Future event in London on 7th March 2012. The event was organised as part of the JISC GECO project.
A privacy framework to smart cities based on people as sensors - Sprint1Welington Silva
This document outlines a proposed cognitive privacy framework for a smart city architecture based on people as sensors. It was produced by Welington Manoel da Silva for his graduate studies at the Federal University of Pernambuco under the supervision of Prof. Dr. Vinícius Cardoso Garcia and co-supervision of Prof. Dr. Alexandre Álvaro of the Federal University of São Carlos. The document lists related articles and reports produced, as well as an ongoing systematic literature review and proposed timeline.
Imagining urban interactions: strategies for exploring future design landscapesMichael Smyth
Michael Smyth and Ingi Helgason from Edinburgh Napier University explore urban interaction design through rapid ethnography workshops, building on scrapbooks, sketches, and moodboards to inspire conceptual connections between tangible objects and imagined behaviors. Their work examines the intersections and crossing points between the physical and digital worlds, looking at how to extend horizons to identify emergent themes through design fictions and critical design that provokes thought.
There are several stages in the process of architectural model making; By being aware of each stage and commenting on that particular stage, we can provide faster turnaround on the physical model.
Community mapping, web GIS and the Creative Rural EconomyGreg_French
The document proposes using community mapping, web GIS, and a focus on the creative rural economy to empower communities and support rural development. It involves establishing positions at the Applied Geomatics Research Group to build spatial databases and online tools to engage communities in Annapolis and Digby counties in years 1 and expanding to other areas in year 2. Workshops and training materials would be developed to support communities in areas like agriculture, tourism, culture and history. Funding is requested from various sources including the Rural Secretariat to support the two year proposal.
Hardik Tuvar is a senior GIS executive with over 3.9 years of experience in the GIS industry. He has extensive experience developing GIS systems for municipalities and private sector clients. Some of his project experience includes developing web-based GIS applications for Surat Municipal Corporation and cadastral mapping projects. He is proficient in various GIS, remote sensing, and CAD software. Hardik holds a post-graduation degree in Remote Sensing and GIS from Gujarat University.
6 lessons for city making by Raoul BunschotenEIT Climate-KIC
Raoul Bunschoten is an architect and urban planner specialised in dynamic masterplanning, Smart City Design, and participatory design processes and is director of CHORA Berlin. He is Professor of Sustainable Urban Planning and Urban Design at the Technical University Berlin and Chair of the CHORA Conscious City Institute. Raoul Bunschoten is co-lead of the Smart Sustainable Districts flagship project of EIT Climate KIC, a founding Professor of the Einstein Centre for Digital Futures, a joint initiative of the 5 leading Berlin Universities and the Senate of Berlin, and is the co-founder of the Smart Cities Platform at the TU Berlin. Raoul Bunschoten has founded the Conscious City Lab at the TUB, incorporating the former BrainBox planning support instrument, and has initiated the Intelligent Prefabrication project for City Making.
Classifying historical business directory data: issues of translation between...JISC GECO
Presentation given at the Geospatial in the Cultural Heritage Domain - Past, Present & Future event in London on 7th March 2012. The event was organised as part of the JISC GECO project.
A privacy framework to smart cities based on people as sensors - Sprint1Welington Silva
This document outlines a proposed cognitive privacy framework for a smart city architecture based on people as sensors. It was produced by Welington Manoel da Silva for his graduate studies at the Federal University of Pernambuco under the supervision of Prof. Dr. Vinícius Cardoso Garcia and co-supervision of Prof. Dr. Alexandre Álvaro of the Federal University of São Carlos. The document lists related articles and reports produced, as well as an ongoing systematic literature review and proposed timeline.
Imagining urban interactions: strategies for exploring future design landscapesMichael Smyth
Michael Smyth and Ingi Helgason from Edinburgh Napier University explore urban interaction design through rapid ethnography workshops, building on scrapbooks, sketches, and moodboards to inspire conceptual connections between tangible objects and imagined behaviors. Their work examines the intersections and crossing points between the physical and digital worlds, looking at how to extend horizons to identify emergent themes through design fictions and critical design that provokes thought.
There are several stages in the process of architectural model making; By being aware of each stage and commenting on that particular stage, we can provide faster turnaround on the physical model.
Community mapping, web GIS and the Creative Rural EconomyGreg_French
The document proposes using community mapping, web GIS, and a focus on the creative rural economy to empower communities and support rural development. It involves establishing positions at the Applied Geomatics Research Group to build spatial databases and online tools to engage communities in Annapolis and Digby counties in years 1 and expanding to other areas in year 2. Workshops and training materials would be developed to support communities in areas like agriculture, tourism, culture and history. Funding is requested from various sources including the Rural Secretariat to support the two year proposal.
Hardik Tuvar is a senior GIS executive with over 3.9 years of experience in the GIS industry. He has extensive experience developing GIS systems for municipalities and private sector clients. Some of his project experience includes developing web-based GIS applications for Surat Municipal Corporation and cadastral mapping projects. He is proficient in various GIS, remote sensing, and CAD software. Hardik holds a post-graduation degree in Remote Sensing and GIS from Gujarat University.
This presentation discusses using crowdsourcing to improve urban mobility by better understanding modal split and mapping mobility infrastructure through tasks completed by individuals, city inhabitants, and crowdworkers. The project aims to design spatial crowdsourcing tasks that provide services for the common good, are gamified, and foster cooperation to help policymakers improve mobility services and policies through more accurate data collection and assessment.
Smart Infrastructure :: a consortium pitchAkhil Ganatra
Smart Infrastructure solicits a consortium leading to,
co-innovation, local adaptability, system modularity
and life-cycle cost optimisation.
With our consortium we address some core functions
required, for a smart city, community, township & building
This document describes a PhD project that uses research-through-design to explore how an architectural approach can enable more resilient and place-specific renewable energy planning in West Greenland. The project investigates both bottom-up and top-down energy governance and how national policy has shaped local settlement patterns. It also studies local practices and traditions to inform creative design solutions for local renewable energy infrastructure that can be adopted and adapted by local communities. The goal is to decrease reliance on imports and build new local resource bases through distributed energy production and shortened production-distribution processes.
This document is a report submitted by Group Five students - Adenike Shonowo, Oluwafemi Salami, Ayobami Ayo-salami, Olumide Adedeji, Babatunde Fajoye, Shakirat Akinleye, Oluseun Bolawa, Adeola Adewale. It discusses geographic information systems (GIS) and its uses in city planning and management. GIS facilitates processing and displaying of digital spatial data and helps with tasks like zoning, resource allocation, emergency response, and more. The report also lists benefits of GIS such as improved efficiency, decision support, and enhanced public participation.
The document discusses a project to develop "Smart City Profiles" for cities in Austria to analyze and compare their performance on climate and energy issues. The profiles will use existing sustainability indicators like carbon footprint and energy consumption. A consortium of Austrian organizations is leading the project to create common profiles that can be applied widely. The profiles aim to identify trends, interpret results, and support cities in evaluating measures and developing smart city concepts.
This document proposes a model for a Canadian "smart city" called Inukshuk City. It discusses how smart cities focus on management, efficiency, digital technologies, and urban intelligence. It emphasizes that the 21st century will be defined by cities. The proposed model for Inukshuk City focuses on making the city resilient, inclusive, learning-oriented, and open through a networked, intelligent approach. It defines intelligence as the ability to process information to achieve goals by linking system components and highlighting logic, reasoning, trends and patterns.
The document discusses Processing and how it relates to programming, computation, and generative art. It provides three quotes that describe Processing as tempting designers into programming, how computer science is about computation rather than computers, and how generative art uses systems and procedures to autonomously create artworks. The document suggests Processing can turn people from other fields to programming and explores the relationship between programming, computation, and generative art practices.
This document discusses urban games as a way to engage youth in sustainability issues through gaming. It describes three pilot projects: an iPad game called 2021 that teaches players about urban planning processes; a board game produced with students in Hammarkullen to develop their town; and Urbania, a light-weight online mapping tool to facilitate urban planning discussions. The projects aimed to improve understanding of urban systems, broaden perspectives, and support participatory planning. Evaluation found the games effective at achieving these goals and increasing engagement of students, residents, and decision-makers in sustainability topics. Further work is needed to develop process knowledge and design effective dialogue using these new tools.
The document discusses how MapTable, a table-shaped computer interface controlled via pen, can improve the urban planning process. MapTable allows different stakeholders to collaboratively create, test, and evaluate plans. It provides advantages like calculating sustainability profiles and sound contours to get feedback and iteratively adjust plans, potentially improving quality and speeding up the planning process.
Urban planning is the most essential requirement for any city to develop.This analysis shows the results of built-up area growth relative to the population at that period.
Inlailawatash provides geographic information systems (GIS) mapping services and training to organizations. They offer services including cartography, use and occupancy mapping, archaeology mapping, data collection, online mapping tools, historical air photos, GIS systems, and map scanning, copying and printing. They recommend tools like ESRI ArcGIS and QGIS for full-featured GIS software and Google Earth, ArcGIS Online, and iMapBC for GIS viewers. They also provide information on data sources, recommended plugins, mapping communities, training programs, and conferences.
The document discusses using scenarios for system prototyping in strategic design and multi-disciplinary option evaluation. It describes how the Institute for Design Research at HBK Braunschweig develops user-oriented design through projects, research, and study programs. It also outlines challenges in modeling future systems and discusses approaches like using scenarios, trends analysis, and future-oriented user research to develop visions of alternative futures in 2050. Methods like morphological analysis and Delphi techniques are applied to generate scenarios across technical, social and political factors for holistic evaluation.
The document analyzes the sustainability of Visakhapatnam, India using satellite imagery from 1993 and 2018. It calculates an Index-Based Built-up Index (IBI) to identify changes in urban areas over time. The analysis found that built-up area increased from 119.68 sqkm in 1993 to 367.41 sqkm in 2018, a growth of over 68%. It also found that increased urbanization correlated with rising population and expansion of the city's road network over the same period. The document concludes the analysis can help plan future smart city developments that integrate population growth and sustainability.
Urban design involves arranging and designing buildings, public spaces, transportation systems, and amenities to give form and character to neighborhoods and cities. It blends architecture, landscape design, and urban planning. The goal is to make urban areas functional yet attractive by connecting people and places through movement, urban form, and the built and natural environments. Urban design draws together many factors like placemaking, sustainability, equity, and economic viability. It creates a vision for an area and deploys resources to implement that vision. Conducting a thorough urban design survey analyzes both physical and non-physical elements at multiple scales from the whole city down to micro-level areas.
Augmented Reality Applications In Contemporary Urban Design Toward A New Tra...Leslie Schulte
This paper explores how augmented reality (AR) can be used as a communication tool and to promote public participation in urban design processes. It discusses several projects that have integrated AR applications into design procedures to communicate designs and stimulate public interest through mixed reality environments. The key feature of AR is that it allows designs to be interacted with in situ, unlike virtual reality which creates artificial environments. By overlaying digital models onto the real world, AR generates a composite view that allows viewers to actively engage with designs in context. This can significantly boost civic participation in place-making by making designs accessible even to non-experts. The paper argues that AR has potential as a tool for more inclusive participation in city design, helping to address issues of
Urban design involves arranging and designing buildings, public spaces, transportation systems, services, and amenities to shape urban areas. It blends architecture, landscape design, and city planning to create functional and attractive places. Urban design draws on placemaking, environmental stewardship, social equity, and economic viability to establish areas with distinct identities. It connects people and places, urban form and movement, and the built and natural environments. Principles of good urban infrastructure design include reducing costs and environmental impacts, integrating systems, conserving natural systems, and meeting community needs within walking distance.
Urban design involves arranging and designing buildings, public spaces, transport systems, and amenities to give cities form, shape, and character. It blends architecture, landscape architecture, and city planning to make urban areas functional and attractive. While related to urban planning, urban design focuses more on physical improvements to the public environment. Recent decades have seen design used more strategically in business innovation and societal development, with designers combining user understanding and overall solutions. Many countries now invest in design to promote their image, raise local awareness of design, and increase industry interest in how design boosts business.
Public participation was a key part of the sustainable urban planning process for the Malveira da Serra and Janes area within the Sintra-Cascais Natural Park in Portugal. Several public participation actions were held starting in the early stages of the plan to involve local stakeholders and residents in defining priorities. The participation encouraged an innovative planning process that promotes sustainable development and a new way of living in the community while protecting the landscape. The planning process was structured in sequential stages with public participation and evaluation built into each stage to help align the plan with local needs and ensure acceptance.
Smart cities of the future: An interdisciplinary literature review. Dimension...IJAEMSJORNAL
The purpose of this article is to classify knowledge of the state of the art about intelligent cities and their various perspectives in which it has been discussed; a qualitative methodology is employed in the review process for the analysis of terms. Several definitions, dimensions and applications of the elements that integrate an intelligent city were located, being the common one in all intelligent cities the presence of the technologies of the information and communication, although it is a not unified concept similar characteristics were detected that look for to improve the quality of life of its inhabitants and the optimization of the resources that are in the city. The results obtained from the literary review show that intelligent cities are based on a model with different dimensions according to the conditions of the same, the implementation of such models tend in the future to generate characteristics such as social openness, stable economy, low unemployment rates, promote equality among citizens. Finally a model is proposed that arises from the literary revision, this model includes aspects like; Economy, environment, intelligent government, people and mobility as dimensions that can improve the quality of life of its inhabitants.
Mapping Invisibles -acquiring GIS for urban planner workshopBeniamino Murgante
Mapping Invisibles -acquiring GIS for urban planner workshop
Małgorzata Hanzl - Institute of Architecture and Town Planning, Technical University of Lodz
Ewa Stankiewicz, Agata Wierzbicka, Tomasz Kujawski, Karol Dzik, Paulina Kowalczyk, Krystian Kwiecinski, Maciek Burdalski, Anna Śliwka, Mateusz Wójcicki, Michał Miszkurka, Semir Poturak, Katarzyna Westrych - Faculty of Architecture, Warsaw University of Technology
Presentation on the Smart Hilltops and NSW Digital Twin innovation programs, with a focus on the value of creating a digital twin for decision-making and community engagement
2017 iii 6_pietro_elisei_bridginginnovationsmartcitiesATTRACTIVE DANUBE
Creating the governance framework
and roadmaps for smart city investments, which are oftentimes
costly, is essential for ensuring that effort is directed to the real needs in the territory. Leveraging on
intrinsic territorial attractiveness potentials, today’s challenge for most cities is
to meet actual urban
problems with the right tools and fitting flagship projects.
The lessons learned and ongoing smart cities initiatives we present aim at bridging the pan
-
European
innovation landscape with the actual beneficiaries using participatory st
rategic planning processes
and integrated approaches to standardizing key performance indicators for Smart Cities (ESPRESSO
Project).
This presentation discusses using crowdsourcing to improve urban mobility by better understanding modal split and mapping mobility infrastructure through tasks completed by individuals, city inhabitants, and crowdworkers. The project aims to design spatial crowdsourcing tasks that provide services for the common good, are gamified, and foster cooperation to help policymakers improve mobility services and policies through more accurate data collection and assessment.
Smart Infrastructure :: a consortium pitchAkhil Ganatra
Smart Infrastructure solicits a consortium leading to,
co-innovation, local adaptability, system modularity
and life-cycle cost optimisation.
With our consortium we address some core functions
required, for a smart city, community, township & building
This document describes a PhD project that uses research-through-design to explore how an architectural approach can enable more resilient and place-specific renewable energy planning in West Greenland. The project investigates both bottom-up and top-down energy governance and how national policy has shaped local settlement patterns. It also studies local practices and traditions to inform creative design solutions for local renewable energy infrastructure that can be adopted and adapted by local communities. The goal is to decrease reliance on imports and build new local resource bases through distributed energy production and shortened production-distribution processes.
This document is a report submitted by Group Five students - Adenike Shonowo, Oluwafemi Salami, Ayobami Ayo-salami, Olumide Adedeji, Babatunde Fajoye, Shakirat Akinleye, Oluseun Bolawa, Adeola Adewale. It discusses geographic information systems (GIS) and its uses in city planning and management. GIS facilitates processing and displaying of digital spatial data and helps with tasks like zoning, resource allocation, emergency response, and more. The report also lists benefits of GIS such as improved efficiency, decision support, and enhanced public participation.
The document discusses a project to develop "Smart City Profiles" for cities in Austria to analyze and compare their performance on climate and energy issues. The profiles will use existing sustainability indicators like carbon footprint and energy consumption. A consortium of Austrian organizations is leading the project to create common profiles that can be applied widely. The profiles aim to identify trends, interpret results, and support cities in evaluating measures and developing smart city concepts.
This document proposes a model for a Canadian "smart city" called Inukshuk City. It discusses how smart cities focus on management, efficiency, digital technologies, and urban intelligence. It emphasizes that the 21st century will be defined by cities. The proposed model for Inukshuk City focuses on making the city resilient, inclusive, learning-oriented, and open through a networked, intelligent approach. It defines intelligence as the ability to process information to achieve goals by linking system components and highlighting logic, reasoning, trends and patterns.
The document discusses Processing and how it relates to programming, computation, and generative art. It provides three quotes that describe Processing as tempting designers into programming, how computer science is about computation rather than computers, and how generative art uses systems and procedures to autonomously create artworks. The document suggests Processing can turn people from other fields to programming and explores the relationship between programming, computation, and generative art practices.
This document discusses urban games as a way to engage youth in sustainability issues through gaming. It describes three pilot projects: an iPad game called 2021 that teaches players about urban planning processes; a board game produced with students in Hammarkullen to develop their town; and Urbania, a light-weight online mapping tool to facilitate urban planning discussions. The projects aimed to improve understanding of urban systems, broaden perspectives, and support participatory planning. Evaluation found the games effective at achieving these goals and increasing engagement of students, residents, and decision-makers in sustainability topics. Further work is needed to develop process knowledge and design effective dialogue using these new tools.
The document discusses how MapTable, a table-shaped computer interface controlled via pen, can improve the urban planning process. MapTable allows different stakeholders to collaboratively create, test, and evaluate plans. It provides advantages like calculating sustainability profiles and sound contours to get feedback and iteratively adjust plans, potentially improving quality and speeding up the planning process.
Urban planning is the most essential requirement for any city to develop.This analysis shows the results of built-up area growth relative to the population at that period.
Inlailawatash provides geographic information systems (GIS) mapping services and training to organizations. They offer services including cartography, use and occupancy mapping, archaeology mapping, data collection, online mapping tools, historical air photos, GIS systems, and map scanning, copying and printing. They recommend tools like ESRI ArcGIS and QGIS for full-featured GIS software and Google Earth, ArcGIS Online, and iMapBC for GIS viewers. They also provide information on data sources, recommended plugins, mapping communities, training programs, and conferences.
The document discusses using scenarios for system prototyping in strategic design and multi-disciplinary option evaluation. It describes how the Institute for Design Research at HBK Braunschweig develops user-oriented design through projects, research, and study programs. It also outlines challenges in modeling future systems and discusses approaches like using scenarios, trends analysis, and future-oriented user research to develop visions of alternative futures in 2050. Methods like morphological analysis and Delphi techniques are applied to generate scenarios across technical, social and political factors for holistic evaluation.
The document analyzes the sustainability of Visakhapatnam, India using satellite imagery from 1993 and 2018. It calculates an Index-Based Built-up Index (IBI) to identify changes in urban areas over time. The analysis found that built-up area increased from 119.68 sqkm in 1993 to 367.41 sqkm in 2018, a growth of over 68%. It also found that increased urbanization correlated with rising population and expansion of the city's road network over the same period. The document concludes the analysis can help plan future smart city developments that integrate population growth and sustainability.
Urban design involves arranging and designing buildings, public spaces, transportation systems, and amenities to give form and character to neighborhoods and cities. It blends architecture, landscape design, and urban planning. The goal is to make urban areas functional yet attractive by connecting people and places through movement, urban form, and the built and natural environments. Urban design draws together many factors like placemaking, sustainability, equity, and economic viability. It creates a vision for an area and deploys resources to implement that vision. Conducting a thorough urban design survey analyzes both physical and non-physical elements at multiple scales from the whole city down to micro-level areas.
Augmented Reality Applications In Contemporary Urban Design Toward A New Tra...Leslie Schulte
This paper explores how augmented reality (AR) can be used as a communication tool and to promote public participation in urban design processes. It discusses several projects that have integrated AR applications into design procedures to communicate designs and stimulate public interest through mixed reality environments. The key feature of AR is that it allows designs to be interacted with in situ, unlike virtual reality which creates artificial environments. By overlaying digital models onto the real world, AR generates a composite view that allows viewers to actively engage with designs in context. This can significantly boost civic participation in place-making by making designs accessible even to non-experts. The paper argues that AR has potential as a tool for more inclusive participation in city design, helping to address issues of
Urban design involves arranging and designing buildings, public spaces, transportation systems, services, and amenities to shape urban areas. It blends architecture, landscape design, and city planning to create functional and attractive places. Urban design draws on placemaking, environmental stewardship, social equity, and economic viability to establish areas with distinct identities. It connects people and places, urban form and movement, and the built and natural environments. Principles of good urban infrastructure design include reducing costs and environmental impacts, integrating systems, conserving natural systems, and meeting community needs within walking distance.
Urban design involves arranging and designing buildings, public spaces, transport systems, and amenities to give cities form, shape, and character. It blends architecture, landscape architecture, and city planning to make urban areas functional and attractive. While related to urban planning, urban design focuses more on physical improvements to the public environment. Recent decades have seen design used more strategically in business innovation and societal development, with designers combining user understanding and overall solutions. Many countries now invest in design to promote their image, raise local awareness of design, and increase industry interest in how design boosts business.
Public participation was a key part of the sustainable urban planning process for the Malveira da Serra and Janes area within the Sintra-Cascais Natural Park in Portugal. Several public participation actions were held starting in the early stages of the plan to involve local stakeholders and residents in defining priorities. The participation encouraged an innovative planning process that promotes sustainable development and a new way of living in the community while protecting the landscape. The planning process was structured in sequential stages with public participation and evaluation built into each stage to help align the plan with local needs and ensure acceptance.
Smart cities of the future: An interdisciplinary literature review. Dimension...IJAEMSJORNAL
The purpose of this article is to classify knowledge of the state of the art about intelligent cities and their various perspectives in which it has been discussed; a qualitative methodology is employed in the review process for the analysis of terms. Several definitions, dimensions and applications of the elements that integrate an intelligent city were located, being the common one in all intelligent cities the presence of the technologies of the information and communication, although it is a not unified concept similar characteristics were detected that look for to improve the quality of life of its inhabitants and the optimization of the resources that are in the city. The results obtained from the literary review show that intelligent cities are based on a model with different dimensions according to the conditions of the same, the implementation of such models tend in the future to generate characteristics such as social openness, stable economy, low unemployment rates, promote equality among citizens. Finally a model is proposed that arises from the literary revision, this model includes aspects like; Economy, environment, intelligent government, people and mobility as dimensions that can improve the quality of life of its inhabitants.
Mapping Invisibles -acquiring GIS for urban planner workshopBeniamino Murgante
Mapping Invisibles -acquiring GIS for urban planner workshop
Małgorzata Hanzl - Institute of Architecture and Town Planning, Technical University of Lodz
Ewa Stankiewicz, Agata Wierzbicka, Tomasz Kujawski, Karol Dzik, Paulina Kowalczyk, Krystian Kwiecinski, Maciek Burdalski, Anna Śliwka, Mateusz Wójcicki, Michał Miszkurka, Semir Poturak, Katarzyna Westrych - Faculty of Architecture, Warsaw University of Technology
Presentation on the Smart Hilltops and NSW Digital Twin innovation programs, with a focus on the value of creating a digital twin for decision-making and community engagement
2017 iii 6_pietro_elisei_bridginginnovationsmartcitiesATTRACTIVE DANUBE
Creating the governance framework
and roadmaps for smart city investments, which are oftentimes
costly, is essential for ensuring that effort is directed to the real needs in the territory. Leveraging on
intrinsic territorial attractiveness potentials, today’s challenge for most cities is
to meet actual urban
problems with the right tools and fitting flagship projects.
The lessons learned and ongoing smart cities initiatives we present aim at bridging the pan
-
European
innovation landscape with the actual beneficiaries using participatory st
rategic planning processes
and integrated approaches to standardizing key performance indicators for Smart Cities (ESPRESSO
Project).
Including a Social Perspective into Urban Planning Using Geographic Informat...shj69
This document summarizes a research project that used an online survey with geographic information system (GIS) techniques to include social perspectives in urban planning in Langenthal, Switzerland. The survey gathered input from residents and businesses on how they use and view the city's marketplace area to inform redevelopment strategies. It found that spatially-enabled social data can provide multidimensional insights for interdisciplinary planning projects and stimulate discussion. Integrating such subjective resident perspectives allows for more sustainable, need-oriented development and democratizes the planning process.
MSLab - A paradigmatic model to shape the metropolitan growthMSLab Polimi
This document discusses a paradigmatic model for managing metropolitan growth. It aims to define a structural urban paradigm and the syntactic and communicative value of architecture at the metropolitan scale. It explores various concepts for understanding metropolitan form, including Lynch's three normative city models, Choay's city spaces and figures, and Foucault's heterotopias. The document examines case studies of metropolitan planning in cities like Paris, Barcelona, Vienna and London. It proposes principles for managing fast-growing metropolises, such as developing polycentric and reticular infrastructure networks to structure growth in an integrated and adaptable manner.
The document discusses smart cities and public sector transformation. It provides definitions of smart cities from various organizations and outlines why cities are pursuing smart strategies. The key aspects of smart cities discussed are smart environment, society, economy, government, and how they relate to improving quality of life, efficiency, competitiveness and sustainability. Successful digital transformation of cities requires focus on 5 pillars - data, interconnection, openness, innovation policies, and participation.
Smart City Citizenship provides rigorous analysis for academics and policymakers on the participatory processes and practices of smart cities to help integrate ICT-related innovation into urban life. Unlike other smart city books that are often edited collections, this book focuses on the business domain and the technological disruptions themselves, also examining the role of citizens and the democratic governance issues raised from an interdisciplinary perspective. As smart city research is a fast-growing topic of scientific inquiry and evolving rapidly, this book is an ideal reference for a much needed discussion.
To cite this book: Calzada, I. (2020), Smart City Citizenship, Cambridge, Massachusetts: Elsevier Science Publishing Co Inc. ISBN-10: 0128153008 ISBN-13: 978-0128153000
Further information:
ELSEVIER
https://www.elsevier.com/books/smart-city-citizenship/calzada/978-0-12-815300-0
AMAZON
https://www.amazon.in/Smart-City-Citizenship-Igor-Calzada/dp/0128153008/ref=sr_1_2?qid=1565528866&refinements=p_27%3AIgor+Calzada&s=books&sr=1-2
The document discusses architectural pedagogy for environmental sustainability. It argues that current approaches in architectural education focus too heavily on analyzing scientific data and not enough on perception as an analytical tool. It posits that developing the concept of adaptively reusing existing space should be embedded in design projects and learning. It advocates teaching architects to engage with intangible layers of space and see opportunities in "lost space" and "anti-space", which requires rethinking architectural pedagogy and spatial analysis methods. It examines the adaptive reuse of the Warwick Junction Precinct in Durban as a case study of how human resilience can vitalize space through responsive growth.
Towards a Design Methodology for Urban Informatics Researchkavasmlikon
This document discusses urban informatics and proposes a methodology for urban informatics research. It defines urban informatics as the study of urban experiences created through real-time ubiquitous technology. The proposed methodology is cross-disciplinary, drawing from social sciences, ubiquitous computing, and human-computer interaction. It advocates for action research, design research, and action design research approaches. The goal is the creation of artifacts that solve problems and provide design knowledge and guidelines.
This document presents a Memorandum of Understanding for a COST Action called CYBERPARKS. The objective of CYBERPARKS is to strengthen dialogue between research on public spaces and ICT development. It will explore the relationship between ICT technologies and public spaces from social, ecological, and urban design perspectives. The Action aims to cross-pollinate these fields to generate improvement activities and spark new ideas. It will create a research platform and network to share knowledge on how ICT impacts the production and use of public open spaces as they relate to sustainable urban development. The economic impact of the Action's activities is estimated at EUR 52 million. The Memorandum will take effect when accepted by at least five parties and remain in
This document provides a summary of Jolijn van den Berg's background and experience. It lists her education including a Professional Master's in Urbanism from Fontys MA+U Academy for Architecture and Urbanism in Tilburg and a Bachelor's in Urban Design from NHTV University of Applied Science in Breda. It also outlines her professional experience working as an urban designer, tutor, and researcher for various architecture and design firms in the Netherlands.
Welcome to a world where completing your architecture assignments with precision and excellence is not only achievable but also hassle-free. At ArchitectureAssignmentHelp.com, we understand the challenges students face when tackling complex architectural concepts within tight deadlines. That's why we're here to offer you comprehensive assistance that goes beyond just getting the work done – we're dedicated to helping you truly understand and excel in your assignments.
Our platform is tailored to meet the specific needs of architecture students like you. Our team consists of seasoned architectural experts who bring both academic knowledge and practical experience to the table. Whether you're struggling with conceptual design, in-depth analysis, or visual presentations, we've got you covered.
We take pride in delivering plagiarism-free, original content that aligns with your academic requirements. Our user-friendly process ensures that you get the support you need efficiently: simply submit your assignment details, receive a competitive quote, and let our experts work their magic. Plus, with 24/7 customer support, you're never alone in your academic journey.
Join the ranks of successful students who have not only improved their grades but also gained a deeper understanding of architectural principles. Don't let assignments hold you back – let ArchitectureAssignmentHelp.com be your partner in achieving academic excellence. Visit us today and experience the difference firsthand!
Similar to Peter Krogh - Aarhus School Of Architecture (20)
Hvordan sælger man kreativitet uden for vores egne cirkler?Seismonaut
Direktør Anna Porse Nielsens oplæg for DMJX den 2. oktober 2017 om, hvordan man formidler værdien af kreativitet til dem, som ikke nødvendigvis jubler over den.
Christian Erfurt holdt oplæg om growth hacking hos Be My Eyes til Headstart Morgenseminar d. 20. april 2017.
Christian Erfurt er CEO hos Be My Eyes - en app, der hjælper blinde ved at sætte dem i forbindelse med seende, der via appen kan hjælpe med hverdagens store og små udfordringer.
Claus Hovge Andersen talte om growth hacking i NORDJYSKE medier til Headstarts morgenseminar d. 20. april 2017.
Claus Hovge Andersen har arbejdet med digitale medier de sidste 18 år, og har blandt andet arbejdet med ecommerce, mobil teknologi og de sidste ti år med digitale forretningsmodeller hos blandt andet Bilbasen.dk, dba.dk, eBay Classifieds. De seneste 6 år har Claus Hovge Andersen arbejdet med digital transformation i mediebranchen, herunder tidligere Jyllands-Posten og nu i NORDJYSKE Medier. Og udover dette har Claus Hovge Andersen siddet i bestyrelsen for flere digitale virksomheder som jobzonen.dk, bilzonen.dk og Watch Medier. Er p.t. aktiv i bestyrelser for flere internetvirksomheder.
Serieiværksætter Thomas Madsen-Mygdal fortalte om vækst til Headstarts morgenseminar d. 20. april 2017.
Thomas Madsen-Mygdal er en dansk designer og iværksætter med en lang og imponerende historik. Thomas var frontløber for internettet, hvor han som medstifter af den første kommercielle danske internetvirksomhed, Mondo, var med til at bringe internettet til Danmark. Senere var Thomas med til at lave virksomheden Podio, som forandrede måden folk arbejder på.
I dag står Thomas i spidsen for TwentyThree, som arbejder med at ændre måden virksomheder kommunikerer via video. Thomas er ligeledes igangsætter og bestyrelsesformand for startup organisationen #CPHFTW. Derudover har han også modtaget IT-Branchens og FDIHs ærespriser.
Headstart Morgenseminar: Working as a NetworkSeismonaut
Thomas Asger Hansen, Head of Global Working Culture hos Grundfos, har de sidste 5 år har han arbejdet med at implementere konceptet "digital workplace". I dette oplæg til Headstart Networks morgenseminar om "Netværk i organisationer" fortæller han hvordan en global virksomhed skaber bedre rammer for at arbejde sammen på tværs af afdelinger og tidszoner gennem en intern netværksplatform.
Sælg en oplevelse - om markedsføring af NorthSide på sociale medierSeismonaut
Anne Jensen fra NorthSide fortalte om hvordan de bruger sociale medier som en central del af deres salgsstrategi, og hvor de forsøger at være relevante året rundt - på trods af at de er en festival, der kun sker en gang om året.
Headstart Network morgenseminar 13/9 2016: Hvad er tillid?Seismonaut
I den digitale tidsalder er anmeldelser, reviews, likes og kommentarer med til at skabe en ny form for økonomi, hvor tillid er den valuta vi sparer op, rejser rundt på nettet med og betaler for vores ydelser med. Har man kun dårlige anmeldelser med i bagagen, er der ingen der vil handle, men har folk udtalt sig rosende om en, er det nemt at bruge nettets mange sociale platforme.
Den transparente virkelighed, som alle uundgåeligt er en del af, skaber nye konsekvenser for både virksomheder og individer. Og det handler ikke bare om deleøkonomi - nej, tænk meget større - det er på mange måder den digitale fremtid for os alle, der er i spil.
Men tillid som fænomen er ikke nyt. Så hvad er tillid egentlig? Hvilken betydning har det for vores samfund og økonomi? Og er tilliden i samfundet i forfald eller på vej op? Disse spørgsmål svarede Christian Bjørnskov, professor i økonomi ved Aarhus Universitet, på til Headstarts morgenseminar.
The document discusses how digital business models must adapt to rising customer expectations in the age of the customer. Customers now expect flexibility, convenience, personalized experiences, and value from both digital and physical offerings. Companies must use technology and data to deliver intelligent, seamless experiences across platforms. By focusing on customer centricity, companies can turn their brands into ecosystems that attract, acquire, retain, and co-create value with customers.
This document discusses transforming marketing from campaign-driven push marketing to "always on" marketing. It summarizes that consumers find commercials annoying and are using adblockers more. The document proposes that marketers 1) understand consumers deeper through customer journeys and micro-moments, 2) build a framework around hero, hub and help content, and 3) think and work more like a publisher with editorial meetings and a focus on quality, community-building and helpful content.
Veronika Janeckova & Nelson Sachse, Made by many - Headstart d. 2. juni 2015Seismonaut
Made by Many has offices in both London and New York, and they will let us in on their way of working in the intersection between business strategy, product design and user insights with global customers like Skype and Universal to ensure the best end result.
Kasper Wodstrup Rost, Delta Projects - Headstart d. 2. juni 2015Seismonaut
The advertising business is changing vastly at the moment as programmatic advertisement is increasingly on companies radar. Kasper will enlightens us about this new trend, and what the advantage there are to combine creativity and advertisement with real time data.
We all know that the world is changing quicker than ever before, and that businesses are always looking for new ways to create advantages for themselves. Cerys will explore the market dynamics that are combining to create a volatile, uncertain, complex and ambiguous operating environment for businesses and the new types of organisational risk that these are creating. Then, looking at some of the most innovative businesses in the world, highlight some of the new business models, organisational structures and ways of working that are coming together to help transform companies for the 21st century.
Creative Executive Club - Johanne Bruun Sørensen, Hello MondaySeismonaut
Johanne Bruun Sørensen fra Hello Monday holdte et inspirerende oplæg på Creative Executive Clubs morgenseminar i Aarhus onsdag d. 15. april 2015.
Creative Executive Club morgenseminarer byder på internationale og nationale eksperter, meningsdannere og kreative topledere med viden om vækst, internationalisering og fremtidens ledelses- og organisationsformer i de kreative industrier.
Creative Executive Clubs mål er at sætte barren endnu højere i de kreative brancher. Vi skal udvikle stærke forretningsområder og -modeller særligt for de kreative erhverv. Og vi skal gøre det ved at videndele og skabe synergier på tværs af brancher.
Creative Executive Club er et samarbejde mellem Erhverv Aarhus og More.Creative.
Creative Executive Club - Stephen Burrell, Kopenhagen FurSeismonaut
Stephen Burrell fra Kopenhagen Fur holdte et inspirerende oplæg på Creative Executive Clubs morgenseminar onsdag d. 15. april 2015.
Creative Executive Club morgenseminarer byder på internationale og nationale eksperter, meningsdannere og kreative topledere med viden om vækst, internationalisering og fremtidens ledelses- og organisationsformer i de kreative industrier.
Creative Executive Clubs mål er at sætte barren endnu højere i de kreative brancher. Vi skal udvikle stærke forretningsområder og -modeller særligt for de kreative erhverv. Og vi skal gøre det ved at videndele og skabe synergier på tværs af brancher.
Creative Executive Club er et samarbejde mellem Erhverv Aarhus og More.Creative.
Digitalisering handler om mennesker - ikke mindst i den offentlige sektor, hvor digitaliseringsstrategier hos både kommuner og stat rulles ud i disse år. Sociale medier er med til at understøtte digitaliseringen på en borgernær måde.
A workshop hosted by the South African Journal of Science aimed at postgraduate students and early career researchers with little or no experience in writing and publishing journal articles.
বাংলাদেশের অর্থনৈতিক সমীক্ষা ২০২৪ [Bangladesh Economic Review 2024 Bangla.pdf] কম্পিউটার , ট্যাব ও স্মার্ট ফোন ভার্সন সহ সম্পূর্ণ বাংলা ই-বুক বা pdf বই " সুচিপত্র ...বুকমার্ক মেনু 🔖 ও হাইপার লিংক মেনু 📝👆 যুক্ত ..
আমাদের সবার জন্য খুব খুব গুরুত্বপূর্ণ একটি বই ..বিসিএস, ব্যাংক, ইউনিভার্সিটি ভর্তি ও যে কোন প্রতিযোগিতা মূলক পরীক্ষার জন্য এর খুব ইম্পরট্যান্ট একটি বিষয় ...তাছাড়া বাংলাদেশের সাম্প্রতিক যে কোন ডাটা বা তথ্য এই বইতে পাবেন ...
তাই একজন নাগরিক হিসাবে এই তথ্য গুলো আপনার জানা প্রয়োজন ...।
বিসিএস ও ব্যাংক এর লিখিত পরীক্ষা ...+এছাড়া মাধ্যমিক ও উচ্চমাধ্যমিকের স্টুডেন্টদের জন্য অনেক কাজে আসবে ...
How to Make a Field Mandatory in Odoo 17Celine George
In Odoo, making a field required can be done through both Python code and XML views. When you set the required attribute to True in Python code, it makes the field required across all views where it's used. Conversely, when you set the required attribute in XML views, it makes the field required only in the context of that particular view.
This document provides an overview of wound healing, its functions, stages, mechanisms, factors affecting it, and complications.
A wound is a break in the integrity of the skin or tissues, which may be associated with disruption of the structure and function.
Healing is the body’s response to injury in an attempt to restore normal structure and functions.
Healing can occur in two ways: Regeneration and Repair
There are 4 phases of wound healing: hemostasis, inflammation, proliferation, and remodeling. This document also describes the mechanism of wound healing. Factors that affect healing include infection, uncontrolled diabetes, poor nutrition, age, anemia, the presence of foreign bodies, etc.
Complications of wound healing like infection, hyperpigmentation of scar, contractures, and keloid formation.
This slide is special for master students (MIBS & MIFB) in UUM. Also useful for readers who are interested in the topic of contemporary Islamic banking.
it describes the bony anatomy including the femoral head , acetabulum, labrum . also discusses the capsule , ligaments . muscle that act on the hip joint and the range of motion are outlined. factors affecting hip joint stability and weight transmission through the joint are summarized.
ISO/IEC 27001, ISO/IEC 42001, and GDPR: Best Practices for Implementation and...PECB
Denis is a dynamic and results-driven Chief Information Officer (CIO) with a distinguished career spanning information systems analysis and technical project management. With a proven track record of spearheading the design and delivery of cutting-edge Information Management solutions, he has consistently elevated business operations, streamlined reporting functions, and maximized process efficiency.
Certified as an ISO/IEC 27001: Information Security Management Systems (ISMS) Lead Implementer, Data Protection Officer, and Cyber Risks Analyst, Denis brings a heightened focus on data security, privacy, and cyber resilience to every endeavor.
His expertise extends across a diverse spectrum of reporting, database, and web development applications, underpinned by an exceptional grasp of data storage and virtualization technologies. His proficiency in application testing, database administration, and data cleansing ensures seamless execution of complex projects.
What sets Denis apart is his comprehensive understanding of Business and Systems Analysis technologies, honed through involvement in all phases of the Software Development Lifecycle (SDLC). From meticulous requirements gathering to precise analysis, innovative design, rigorous development, thorough testing, and successful implementation, he has consistently delivered exceptional results.
Throughout his career, he has taken on multifaceted roles, from leading technical project management teams to owning solutions that drive operational excellence. His conscientious and proactive approach is unwavering, whether he is working independently or collaboratively within a team. His ability to connect with colleagues on a personal level underscores his commitment to fostering a harmonious and productive workplace environment.
Date: May 29, 2024
Tags: Information Security, ISO/IEC 27001, ISO/IEC 42001, Artificial Intelligence, GDPR
-------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Find out more about ISO training and certification services
Training: ISO/IEC 27001 Information Security Management System - EN | PECB
ISO/IEC 42001 Artificial Intelligence Management System - EN | PECB
General Data Protection Regulation (GDPR) - Training Courses - EN | PECB
Webinars: https://pecb.com/webinars
Article: https://pecb.com/article
-------------------------------------------------------------------------------
For more information about PECB:
Website: https://pecb.com/
LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/company/pecb/
Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/PECBInternational/
Slideshare: http://www.slideshare.net/PECBCERTIFICATION
Walmart Business+ and Spark Good for Nonprofits.pdfTechSoup
"Learn about all the ways Walmart supports nonprofit organizations.
You will hear from Liz Willett, the Head of Nonprofits, and hear about what Walmart is doing to help nonprofits, including Walmart Business and Spark Good. Walmart Business+ is a new offer for nonprofits that offers discounts and also streamlines nonprofits order and expense tracking, saving time and money.
The webinar may also give some examples on how nonprofits can best leverage Walmart Business+.
The event will cover the following::
Walmart Business + (https://business.walmart.com/plus) is a new shopping experience for nonprofits, schools, and local business customers that connects an exclusive online shopping experience to stores. Benefits include free delivery and shipping, a 'Spend Analytics” feature, special discounts, deals and tax-exempt shopping.
Special TechSoup offer for a free 180 days membership, and up to $150 in discounts on eligible orders.
Spark Good (walmart.com/sparkgood) is a charitable platform that enables nonprofits to receive donations directly from customers and associates.
Answers about how you can do more with Walmart!"
How to Manage Your Lost Opportunities in Odoo 17 CRMCeline George
Odoo 17 CRM allows us to track why we lose sales opportunities with "Lost Reasons." This helps analyze our sales process and identify areas for improvement. Here's how to configure lost reasons in Odoo 17 CRM
Main Java[All of the Base Concepts}.docxadhitya5119
This is part 1 of my Java Learning Journey. This Contains Custom methods, classes, constructors, packages, multithreading , try- catch block, finally block and more.
1. Strategic city innovation by means of Urban Computing Peter Gall Krogh Ass. Professor Aarhus School of Architecture Institute of Design [email_address]