1. M A N A G E M E N T
A S P E C T S
F O R
S U C C E S S F U L
S M A R T C I T Y
I M P L E M E N T A T I O N
N AT I O N A L C O N F E R E N C E E I T B M 2 0 1 7
V I I T, B A R A M AT I
Mr. Atul Bengeri
Regional Manager – Smart Cities
Dell EMC
4. WORKING DEFINITION OF SMART CITY
“A city well-performing in a forward-looking way in various characteristics, built on the
smart combination of endowments and activities of self-decisive, independent and aware
citizens”
Giffinger, R., & Gudrun, H. (2010)
A city “connecting the physical infrastructure, the IT infrastructure, the social
infrastructure, and the business infrastructure to leverage the collective intelligence of
the city.”
Hartley, J. (2005)
A city equipped with basic infrastructure to give a decent quality of life, a clean and
sustainable environment through application of some smart solutions.
5. SUSTAINABLE DEVELOPMENT
“A smart sustainable city is an innovative city that uses information and communication
technologies (ICTs) and other means to improve quality of life, efficiency of urban
operation and services, and competitiveness, while ensuring that it meets the needs of
present and future generations with respect to economic, social and environmental
aspects.”
https://www.itu.int/
International Telecommunication Union
6.
7. MyGov as the core platform for citizen consultation.
Municipal governments supplemented their online MyGov activities with meetings,
discussions, and other public interactions in their respective cities.
https://blog.mygov.in/editorial/citizens-consultation-for-the-smart-cities-mission/
https://www.mygov.in/
8.
9. • What are the business models, the policies, regulatory
approaches and partnerships we need to move forward?
• What can we learn from differing international perspectives
cutting across both emerging and developed markets?
• How can we adopt or adapt best practices to our own local
realities?
12. SINGAPORE
• Sensors and cameras to be deployed across the island to track everything from
cleanliness to traffic
• the city can detect if people are smoking in unauthorized zones or if people are
throwing litter out of high-rise buildings
• In the 1970s, it launched an initiative to address what was then a chronic congestion
problem
• substantial investments in road sensors, phased traffic lights, and smart parking
13. BARCELONA
• Extensive use of sensors to help monitor and manage traffic
• Remodeled flow will reduce traffic related problems by 21%.
• Installed smart parking technology as well as smart streetlights, and sensors for
monitoring air quality and noise
• Barcelona's strength is in its sustainable energy—smart grid pilot projects, smart
meters, and its comprehensive plan for reducing carbon emissions
• The city has also made its Sentilo sensor and actuator platform available on the
Internet. The open-source software platform can be found on Github.
15. LONDON
• One of the tech hubs of the world, London fares well regarding broadband availability.
• £4-billion pound investment in roads over the next decade including £200-million
investment in the bus network.
• Reliance on unclean energy and its “relatively poor energy use reduction initiatives
16. PMO
1 2
4 3
ICT role and
roadmap for
smart
sustainable cities
Policy and
positioning
KIPs and metrics
for smart
sustainable cities
Smart
sustainable cities
infrastructure