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What is smart?

So what exactly is a smart city? “A

smart city has intelligence so we waste

fewer resources, we gain time, and we

improve the quality of life,” says

Spiro

Pollalis

, Professor of Design, Technology

and Management at the Harvard

Graduate School of Design. Smart cities

use information technology and digital

data to operate more efficiently, with a

focus on transport systems, energy, and

water supplies.

Spiro Pollalis

is Professor

of Design Technology

and Management at

the Harvard Graduate

School of Design

(HGSD). Professor Pollalis

is the chief planner

for the new smart city

DHA City Karachi and

the concept designer

of the information

infrastructure in the

new administrative

city, Songdo, in South

Korea. The HGSD aims

to provide solutions

to pressing global

issues such as rapid

urbanization and the

scarcity of resources.

Alex Herceg

leads the Efficient

Building Systems service at Lux

Research, an independent research

and advisory firm providing strategic

advice and ongoing intelligence

for emerging technologies. Here is

what he has to say about building

intelligence: “A building is like a

United Nations delegation: everyone

has the same topics on their mind

but they need a translator. It’s the

same within a building: a lighting

system has its own language and so

too does the heating system. In the

future we will see all the different

systems communicating with each

other in a sophisticated way. We

are moving down the path to high

performance buildings, but there’s

still a long way to go. We need to

see more innovation in sensors and

controls for existing buildings. It’s

not about making you live differently,

but about making your environment

function more smoothly, comfortably,

and efficiently.”

Bright buildings

When the term was first coined, it

was used to describe gleaming new

urban centers in the middle of the

desert or on greenfield sites, built from

the top down, according to a master

plan. But increasingly, smart city is a

term being applied to the retrofitting

of existing urban centers, growing

organically smarter from the bottom

up through a variety of innovations.

Professor

Carlo Ratti

, Director of

the SENSEable City Laboratory at the

Massachusetts Institute of Technology

(MIT), compares a smart city, or sensible

city, as he prefers to call them, to a

Formula One racing car. In the past,

success on the circuit was dependent

on the skill of the driver and the car’s

mechanics, but over the past two

decades “the car was transformed into

a computer that was monitored in

real time by thousands of sensors,

becoming ‘intelligent’ and better able

to respond to the conditions of the

“The best part of the

bridge is the sense of

flying when I cross

it,” says Professor

Spiro Pollalis about

the pedestiran bridge

over Kifissias Avenue

in Athens, Greece,

that he designed.

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