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Shaping Smart for Better Cities

Rethinking and Shaping Relationships between Urban Space and Digital Technologies

  • 1st Edition - November 14, 2020
  • Latest edition
  • Editors: Alessandro Aurigi, Nancy Odendaal
  • Language: English

Shaping Smart for Better Cities powerfully demonstrates the range of theoretical and practical challenges, opportunities and success factors involved in successfully deploying… Read more

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Description

Shaping Smart for Better Cities powerfully demonstrates the range of theoretical and practical challenges, opportunities and success factors involved in successfully deploying digital technologies in cities, focusing on the importance of recognizing local context and multi-layered urban relationships in designing successful urban interventions. The first section, ‘Rethinking Smart (in) Places’ interrogates the smart city from a theoretical vantage point. The second part, ‘Shaping Smart Places’ examines various case studies critically. Hence the volume offers an intellectual resource that expands on the current literature, but also provides a pedagogical resource to universities as well as a reflective opportunity for practitioners. The cases allow for an examination of the practical implications of smart interventions in space, whilst the theoretical reflections enable expansion of the literature. Students are encouraged to learn from case studies and apply that learning in design. Academics will gain from the learning embedded in the documentation of the case studies in different geographic contexts, while practitioners can apply their learning to the conceptualisation of new forms of technology use.

Key features

  • Demonstrates how to adapt smart urban interventions for hyper-local context in geographic parameters, spatial relationships, and socio-political characteristics
  • Provides a problem-solving approach based on specific smart place examples, applicable to real-life urban management
  • Offers insights from numerous case studies of smart cities interventions in real civic spaces

Readership

Early career researchers and graduate students from urban planning, geography, transport, and economics interested in smart city design. Also of interest to industry professionals and policymakers / public administrators

Table of contents

 

  1. Introduction
  2. (Alessandro Aurigi and Nancy Odendaal)

    SECTION A – DESIGNING AND SHAPING SMART PLACES

  3. Designing Smart Places: towards a holistic, recombinant approach
  4. (Alessandro Aurigi)

  5. Responsive public spaces: five mechanisms for the design of public space in the era of networked urbanism
  6. (Martijn de Waal, Frank Suurenbroek and Ivan Nio)

  7. Smart Plays
  8. (Ben van Berkel, Filippo Lodi, Wael Batal)

  9. Snowfall on Piazza Castello. Stubborn dispositions and multiple publics in a (temporarily smart) Milanese square
  10. (Yulya Besplemennova and Andrea Pollio)

  11. Designing for Hyperlocal: The Use of Locative Media to Augment Place Narratives
  12. (Efstathia Kostopoulou and Ava Fatah gen Schieck)

  13. Place-Based Design as Method of Accessing Memories and Meanings: Historical Augmentation in the Harbor Promenade of Lahti
  14. (Aale Luusua, Henrika Pihlajaniemi, Mika Hakkarainen, Petri Honkamaa, Eveliina Juntunen & Sami Huuskonen)

  15. Designing smart to revitialise a multicultural shopping street
  16. (Ummu Sakiinah, Ingrid Mulder, Annemiek van Boeijen, Rudi Darson)

  17. Affective Technologies for Enchanting Spaces and Cultivating Places
  18. (Manuel Portela and Carlos Granell-Canut)

  19. Smart engagement for smart cities: Design patterns for digitally augmented, situated community engagement
  20. (Callum Parker, Martin Tomitsch, Joel Fredericks)

    SECTION B – CO-PRODUCING SMART PLACES

  21. Platform urbanism and hybrid places in African cities
  22. (Nancy Odendaal)

  23. Learning lessons for avoiding the inadvertent exclusion of communities from smart city projects
  24. (Alan-Miguel Valdez, Edward Wigley, Oliver Zanetti and Gillian Rose)

  25. Putting the People Back into the ‘Smart’: Developing a Middle-Out Framework for Engaging Citizens
  26. (Glenda Amayo Caldwell, Joel Fredericks, Luke Hespanhol, Marianella Chamorro-Koc, María José Sánchez Varela Barajas and María José Castelazo André)

  27. Digital Twins of Cities and Evasive Futures
  28. (Paul Cureton and Nick Dunn)

  29. The Impact of Peer-to-Peer Accommodation on Place Authenticity: A Placemaking Perspective
  30. (Marcus Foth, Ana Bilandzic and Mirko Guaralda)

  31. Smart and Informal? Self-Organisation and Everyday
  32. (Jaime Hernández-Garcia and Iliana Hernández-Garcia)

  33. Situating urban smartness: ICTs and infrastructure in Nairobi’s informal areas
  34. (Prince K. Guma)

  35. Emthonjeni – Public space as smart learning networks: A case study of the Violence Prevention Through Urban Upgrading methodology in Cape Town
  36. (Kathryn Ewing and Michael Krause)

  37. Watering India’s smart cities
  38. (Cat Button)

  39. Potential and shortcomings of two design-based strategies for the engagement of city stakeholders with open data
  40. (Luca Simeone, Nicola Morelli, Amalia De Götzen)

Product details

  • Edition: 1
  • Latest edition
  • Published: November 18, 2020
  • Language: English

About the editors

AA

Alessandro Aurigi

Alessandro Aurigi is Professor of Urban Design and Associate Dean: Research at the University of Plymouth, UK. He was previously Head of the School of Architecture, Design and Environment at Plymouth. He also worked at Newcastle University where he was Director (Head of Department) of Architecture, and as a lecturer at UCL (UK). His research focuses on the relationships between our increasingly digital society and the ways we conceive, design, and manage urban space, to enhance and support place quality. Alex is a member of the Peer-Review College of the AHRC, and has published widely on the topic of digital technology and urban space.
Affiliations and expertise
Professor of Urban Design and Associate Dean: Research, University of Plymouth, UK

NO

Nancy Odendaal

Nancy Odendaal is Associate Professor in City and Regional Planning at the University of Cape Town. Her research focuses on three interconnected areas of enquiry: infrastructure development, technology innovation and socio-spatial change in cities. She has published extensively on smart cities, with her research focused on the interface between new technologies and marginalised spaces. Previously, Nancy was based at the African Centre for Cities (at the University of Cape Town), where she coordinated the expansion of the Association of African Planning Schools (AAPS), and managed an Africa-wide project on curricula reform of city and regional planning education.
Affiliations and expertise
Associate Professor, City and Regional Planning, University of Cape Town, South Africa

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