Contenu connexe
Similaire à Riga Comm (2017) (20)
Riga Comm (2017)
- 1. © 2017 Nokia1 © 2017 Nokia1
Every city can be
a smart city
(though there are different implementation routes to get there)
Marc Jadoul @mjadoul
Riga, 10 November 2017
- 2. © 2017 Nokia2 © 2017 Nokia2
A ‘smart city’ is a community that is capable
of reinventing itself by making urban living
smarter, safer, and more sustainable (using
ICT technologies and other means.)
smart safe sustainable
- 3. © 2017 Nokia3
Talking about smart cities is often like comparing apples and oranges;
they differ in vision, objectives, implementation, budgets, etc.
https://www.smartnation.sghttps://amsterdamsmartcity.com http://www.discoverneom.com
- 4. © 2017 Nokia4
A year ago, Machina Research* interviewed 22 smart cities around the world
* In the mean time, Machina Research has become part of Gartner
smart safe sustainable
Auckland
TokyoWuxi
ShanghaiBangkokDehli
SingaporePune
Cape
Town
New YorkSan
Francisco
β β
Bristol
β
Berlin
β
Paris
β
Vienna
β
Mexico
City
Cleveland
Bogota São
Paulo
β
Barcelona Jeddah Dubai
β
β
- 5. © 2017 Nokia5
The Nokia-commissioned research resulted in an inventory of best
practices from and a list of recommendations for smart city stakeholders
Vendor
relationships
Data regulationOrganization and
coordination
Engaging citizens
Mobilizing
resources
Procurement
- 6. © 2017 Nokia7
The ‘smart city playbook’ can be freely downloaded
Download “The Smart City Playbook”
nokia.ly/smartcityplaybook
Replay the webinar
nokia.ly/smartcitywebinar
- 7. © 2017 Nokia8
The report also revealed three implementation routes to a smart city
H
Anchor
cities
Platform
cities
Beta cities
- 8. © 2017 Nokia9
Each routes puts emphasis on a different component of a smart city
1. applications 2. (ICT) infrastructure
3. ecosystem
- 9. © 2017 Nokia10
A piecemeal implementation strategy holds the risk of creating application
‘stovepipes’ with high integration and operation costs
Connec-
tivity
Data
IoT
platform
Devices
Applica-
tions
- 11. © 2017 Nokia12
Barcelona started as an application-driven city, but has started recognizing
the need for deploying a common platform
“There are a lot of different silos,
a lot of sensor vendors, a lot of
different applications, and the first
thing we need is a common layer, the
main lesson we have learnt in Barcelona
is that the first thing you need to
become a successful smart city is to
start deploying a common platform.”
Francesca Bria, Barcelona’s chief technology
officer and digital commissioner https://www.ft.com/content/6d2fe2a8-722c-11e7-93ff-99f383b09ff9
- 12. © 2017 Nokia13
Minneapolis/Saint Paul has developed a holistic vision on mobility and
public transportation
http://bit.ly/1LARh2t
“A prosperous urban center in
which people can easily choose to
live a car-free or car-light lifestyle,
using smart and integrated
transportation options, to travel
where and when they want
to go, conveniently and safely.”
- 13. © 2017 Nokia14
Data is the new oil – a lot of value is created through the refinement process
Sensing
Monitoring
Analytics
Learning
Control
- 14. © 2017 Nokia15
Turning big data into open data may unleash new value for cities
http://www.opendatanow.com/2013/11/new-big-data-vs-open-data-mapping-it-out
Citizen engagement
programs not based on
data (e.g. petition websites)
Non-public data for
marketing, infrastructure
planning, business analysis,
(nat’l) security
Large datasets from
scientific research, social
media or non-
government sources
Public data from local/state/federal
government (e.g. budget data)
Public reporting (e.g. environmental, social & governance) and
other business data (e.g. consumer complaints, transportation schedules)
Large public government datasets
(e.g. GPS, commerce, demographics, healthcare)
Big
Data
Open
Gov’t
Open
Data
- 15. © 2017 Nokia16
The New York City data portal publishes 1,100+ open data sets
https://opendata.cityofnewyork.us/
- 16. © 2017 Nokia17
A public-private ecosystem, open collaboration, and a continuous dialog with/
between technology stakeholders, city leaders, and citizens are key to success
use cases execution
partners
technology
stakeholders
city leaders
& citizens
business
models
application
concepts
solution
production
sustainable
deployment
agile
prototyping
€
business
case
- 17. © 2017 Nokia18
The Auckland (New Zealand) connected bus shelter trial focusses on
ecosystem, business models, and user experience
http://ngconnect.org/wp-content/uploads/2016/03/PR1512017052EN_Innovation-2020-Connected_Bus_Shelter_Report.pdf
- 18. © 2017 Nokia19
The Amsterdam smart city initiative employs only 7 FTEs that call themselves
‘matchmakers’ rather than city ‘planners’ or solution ‘owners’
https://www.nordicedge.org/wp-content/uploads/2017/10/FA-Vermast.pdf
- 19. © 2017 Nokia20 © 2017 Nokia20
A city can only be as
smart as its citizens.
Building a smart city is
building a happy city.
Two more things: smart cities need smart technology, but…
- 20. © 2017 Nokia21
Dubai wants to be the ‘happiest city on earth’
“The new project creates a
structured and scientific approach
to assessing projects and
initiatives, helping us understand
where efforts will have the
maximum impact on happiness.”
H.E. Dr Aisha Bint Butti Bin Bishr,
Director General of the Smart Dubai Office
http://www.smartdubai.ae/story0606.php
- 21. © 2017 Nokia22
At Nokia, we create the technology to
connect the world — and make cities
smarter, safer, and more sustainable
Nokia IMPACT IoT Platform
platform.innovation.nokia.com
IoT Community ecosystem
iotcommunity.com
Nokia smart city
networks.nokia.com/smart-city