Librería Portfolio Librería Portfolio

Búsqueda avanzada

TIENE EN SU CESTA DE LA COMPRA

0 productos

en total 0,00 €

SMART CITIES: A SPATIALISED INTELLIGENCE - AD PRIMER
Título:
SMART CITIES: A SPATIALISED INTELLIGENCE - AD PRIMER
Subtítulo:
Autor:
PICON, A
Editorial:
JOHN WILEY
Año de edición:
2016
ISBN:
978-1-119-07559-2
Páginas:
168
39,95 €

 

Sinopsis

As cities compete globally, the Smart City has been touted as the important new strategic driver for regeneration and growth. Smart Cities are employing information and communication technologies in the quest for sustainable economic development and the fostering of new forms of collective life. This has made the Smart City an essential focus for engineers, architects, urban designers, urban planners, and politicians, as well as businesses such as CISCO, IBM and Siemens. Despite its broad appeal, few comprehensive books have been devoted to the subject so far, and even fewer have tried to relate it to cultural issues and to assume a truly critical stance by trying to decipher its consequences on urban space and experience. This cultural and critical lens is all the more important as the Smart City is as much an ideal permeated by Utopian beliefs as a concrete process of urban transformation. This ideal possesses a strong self-fulfilling character: our cities will become 'Smart' because we want them to.


This book opens with an examination of the technological reality on which Smart Cities are built, from the chips and sensors that enable us to monitor what happens within the infrastructure to the smartphones that connect individuals. Through these technologies, the urban space appears as activated, almost sentient. This activation generates two contrasting visions: on the one hand, a neo-cybernetic ambition to steer the city in the most efficient way; and on the other, a more bottom-up, participative approach in which empowered individuals invent new modes of cooperation. A thorough analysis of these two trends reveals them to be complementary. The Smart City of the near future will result from their mutual adjustment. In this process, urban space plays a decisive role. Smart Cities are contemporary with a 'spatial turn' of the digital. Based on key technological developments like geo-localisation and augmented reality, the rising importance of space explains the strategic role of mapping in the evolution of the urban experience. Throughout this exploration of some of the key dimensions of the Smart City, this book constantly moves from the technological to the spatial as well as from a critical assessment of existing experiments to speculations on the rise of a new form of collective intelligence. In the future, cities will become smarter in a much more literal way than what is often currently assumed.



Table of Contents

Acknowledgements 005

Introduction: A New Urban Ideal 009

Spatialised Intelligence 011

Technology, Space and Politics 015

Chapter 1: The Advent of the Smart City, from Flow Management to Event Control 023

Defining the Smart City 024

Self-Fulfilling Fictions 030

The Sentient and Sensory City 037

Massive Quantities of Data 046

What Happens 052

Chapter 2: A Tale of Two Cities 067

Neocybernetic Temptation 069

The Cyborg-City Hypothesis 078

Spontaneous City, Collaborative City 083

The Digital Individual 091

Chapter 3: Urban Intelligence, Space and Maps 105

Augmented Reality and Geolocation 106

Towards Three-Dimensional Urbanism 110

A New Relationship to Infrastructure 119

The Stakes of Representation 124

A New Aesthetic 138

Laboratories of Public Life in the Digital Age 140

Conclusion: The Challenges of Intelligence 145

The Limits of All-Digital Solutions 146

The Necessary Diversification of Scenarios 149

Public/Private 153

From Event to History 154

Bibliography 158

Index 162

Picture Credits 167