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The Connected Urban Development
Experience
Bas Boorsma Head, Connected Urban Development Director, Internet Business Solutions Group
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CUD Goals
five Year Cisco commitment work with major cities to develop innovative solutions using ICT (information
and communications technology) to reduce carbon dioxide emissions to forge blueprints, models, policies and practices that help to create a
successful, connected, competitive, attractive and sustainable 21st century city
the development and exchange of relevant thought leadership and replicable methodologies between CUD Cities and beyond.
Connected Urban Development (CUD)
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Connected Urban Development A Blueprint for City Transformation
Broadband Platform IP-Enabled Homes and Offices, Roads, Utilities, Workplace Design
Sustainable Urban Planning
Connected & Sustainable Work
Smart work centres
Digital Swarming & Hub Pavilions
Connected Workplaces
Connected Workforce
Connected & Sustainable Buildings
Homes
Office Buildings
Public Spaces
Public Transit Hubs
Hospitals and Schools
Connected & Sustainable
Mobility
Smart Road Pricing
Personal Travel Assistant
Connected Public Transportation
Connected & Sustainable
Energy
Renewables & co-Generation
Urban Monitoring & Measurement
Citizens Energy Efficiency
Sustainable Socio -
Economics
Active Citizenship & Eco Maps
Innovative Green Business
Models and Sustainability
Clusters
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Bring Information to the User, Not the User to the Information
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Utrecht/A2
From 2 to 20+ locations in Amsterdam From 1 to 14 cities around the world Key Features of SWC
Amsterdam
Almere
Schiphol
Created a Connected Community Center pilot with Local Real estate developers, Cisco, and Almere + Amsterdam Municipalities
Flexible working stations and lounges for employees of IBM, HP and Amsterdam Municipality
Conference rooms and advanced collaboration tools such as virtual presence
Link with child day care and other services
Restaurant / Business Clib / Catering
Bank / IT Support / Notary & Legal advice / Employment agency
Massive personal car travels substituted through the chain of SWCs
Smart Work Centers
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Double U - Smartwork
Governance
Multiple
Stakeholders
One Stop Shop
Booking Tool
WorkSnug
Market Organizer
Standards, Label
Independent Platform
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Amsterdam
The Hague
Rotterdam
Almere
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Amsterdam
The Hague
Rotterdam
Almere
Public Telepresence Network
Deployment May – December 2010
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Distributed Work Environments, SWCs going global
CUD Cities
Non-CUD Cities
San Francisco Venga - Idaho
Buenos Aires
Lisbon
France Korea/Seoul Germany
The Netherlands
New South Wales
Madrid
Cape Town
U.K.
New Dehli
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…to an Urban Services Platform
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The Network is the Platform for Urban Transformation
Public Private partnerships and platforms, governance is key
Cities are key The “Internet of
Things” enables Urban Innovation – from Research to Sustainable Economic Development
Conclusions
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