peripheria presentation: barcelona
DESCRIPTION
TRANSCRIPT
Jean Barroca Alfamicro
PERIPHÈRIA
Rethinking Cities: framing the future Barcelona, October 10th 2012
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PERIPHÈRIA OBJECTIVES
Deploy convergent Future Internet (FI) pla4orms and services for the promo;on of sustainable lifestyles in and across
emergent networks of “smart” peripheral ci;es in Europe.
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PERIPHÈRIA SMART CITY
People in Places Community interaction
Internet of Things
Internet of Services Internet of People
RFID Sensor networks
Location Based
Services
Social networking
Service composition
Media and 3D
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LIVING LAB ARENAS
Archetypal urban settings in which Living Lab stakeholders co-design sustainable new ways of living
Smart Neighbourhood
Smart Street
Smart Square
Smart Museum and Park
Smart City Hall
Smart Campus
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NEW STAKEHOLDER RELATIONS
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THE PERIPHERIA PLATFORM
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SMART CITIZEN DESIRES Be heard
Be attracted (stay longer in a neighbourhood or group)
Be green
Be engaged (participate e.g. with others, in decisions)
Be valued
Be safe
Be counted (identify with/feel ownership for e.g. a place)
Be aware (e.g. of actions/impacts/benefits)
Be prospective (envisage e.g. possible options/futures)
Be reflective (e.g. on governance arrangements)
Be informed (access information, people, services)
Be integrated (e.g. with/across ethnic/religious minorities)
Be different (e.g. opt out in socially acceptable ways)
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FROM DESIRES TO CHALLENGES
proj. proposers
publicauthorities
citizengroups
desireswishesproblems
citizens
citizens
challenges
proj. teams citizens
select and endorse
discover
create
technologies
select issues
publicauthorities
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THE PERIPHERIA CHALLENGES
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EXAMPLES OF CHALLENGES
Inclusive Campus (Milan)
Sustainable Behaviours (Milan)
Helping the Disabled to Vote (Athens)
Campus as an Urban Lab (Milano)
Public Services for Rural Areas (Palmela)
Green Life (Athens)
Preparing for Effects of Climate Change (Genoa)
Be Seen, Be Heard (Malmoe)
Parking Space Bottleneck (Bremen)
Collective Energy Consumption (Malmoe)
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FROM CHALLENGES TO SOLUTIONS
proj. proposers
publicauthorities
citizengroups
desireswishesproblems
citizens
citizens
challenges
proj. teams citizens
select and endorse
identify
create
technologies
select issues
publicauthorities
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CO-DESIGN PROCESSES
Issues Challenge Ideas Projects Solutions Desires
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THE PERIPHERIA TOYBOX
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SOLUTIONS IN PROGRESS
Visualizing Collective
Energy Consumption
(Arduino + Cosm)
Citizen as Sensors Urban Parking
(ICParkingSpace App)
Prioritizing Green
Projects and Ideas
(MySquare App)
Citizen Self Organization
in an Emergency (Latitude +
Twitter)
Participatory Cinema
Programming (Open Data)
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LL OPEN DATA PROJECTS
Data and Services Citadel CitySDK PERIPHÈRIA
Unstructured Data X X
Structured Datasets X X X
Standardiza;on X X X
App Templates X X
Toolset X X
Co-‐design Pla4orm X
Implemented Services X
CitySDK • Amsterdam • Barcelona • Helsinki • Istanbul • Lamia • Lisbon • Manchester • Rome
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CitySDK Ecosystem
Cities’ prior platforms, services, interfaces, open data
Unified Open City Interfaces through Pilots
as CitySDK components
Engaged SME Developers’ new Services exploiting the City SDK ecosystem, or open source pilot apps
App Stores Public delivery Infrastructures; urban displays
Smart
Tourism
Personal Tour Guide
Smart
Mobility
Personal Travel Assistant
Smart
Participation
FixMyStreet
CitySDK Pilots
CITYSDK ARCHITECTURE
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Journey Planner
My Departures
Timetables
Line Map
Disruption Info
HSL Live
Cycling and Walking
Open Data
Developer.reittiopas.fi
~30 Apps
HSL OPEN DATA
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SMART PARTICIPATION SDK
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TOWARDS SMARTER CITIES: CONNECTING PEOPLE AND THINGS
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LINKING SENSORS TO INTERNET
Barranquilla, Colombia
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OPEN DATA EXTREME EXAMPLE
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PERIPHERIA: LESSONS LEARNED Open data is not enough to achieve societal transformation, opening data must be closely linked to
the creation of a co-design ecosystem where citizens have an active role in finding solutions for a more sustainable city
Participatory service co-design processes require institutional framing in order to have a lasting impact
The development of living lab innovation ecosystems requires a constant monitoring of the coherence of activity strands
Convergent future internet service platforms need to combine both technological and social dimensions
Engaging stakeholders in the co-design of FI technologies must provide a substantial and relevant motivation and address technology potentials in the context of their social and political impacts
Broad and ambitious re-shaping of smart city structures and services requires both top-down and bottom-up approaches, with a key role for evaluation and impact assessment
THANK YOU Jean Barroca