smart cities day 2 urban innovation

274
Welcome #SmartCitiesUK

Upload: matthew-abbott

Post on 13-Apr-2017

606 views

Category:

Design


0 download

TRANSCRIPT

Page 1: Smart Cities Day 2 Urban Innovation

Welcome

#SmartCitiesUK

Page 2: Smart Cities Day 2 Urban Innovation

Chair's welcome & introduction

Rick Hartwig, Head of Sector,

Built Environment, The Institution

of Engineering and Technology

#SmartCitiesUK

Page 3: Smart Cities Day 2 Urban Innovation

Rick Hartwig

Built Environment Lead

Inspiring the next generation of engineers and techniciansInforming the wider engineering community

Influencing government and standards to advance society

Page 4: Smart Cities Day 2 Urban Innovation

Strategic Engagement Partnerships

Collaboratively working with

Industry, Academia and Government

to engineer solutions for our greatest societal challenges.

Page 5: Smart Cities Day 2 Urban Innovation

What is a Smart City?

Page 6: Smart Cities Day 2 Urban Innovation
Page 7: Smart Cities Day 2 Urban Innovation
Page 8: Smart Cities Day 2 Urban Innovation
Page 9: Smart Cities Day 2 Urban Innovation

IET research explores

public awareness

and attitudes …

FREE REPORT download at www.theiet.org/smartcities

Page 10: Smart Cities Day 2 Urban Innovation

Why is the level of

understanding so low?

Page 11: Smart Cities Day 2 Urban Innovation

A ‘top down’ approach

Page 12: Smart Cities Day 2 Urban Innovation

UK demonstrator competition

2012 30 UK towns and cities each given £50,000 each to develop proposals for their

smart city projects.

Page 13: Smart Cities Day 2 Urban Innovation

UK demonstrator competition

Awarded to 4 cities!

Page 14: Smart Cities Day 2 Urban Innovation

Future Cities working group

The IET Future Cities working group has identified the need for the engineering

community to shape a response to the challenge of taking our cities forward ... how best to

inspire, inform and influence smart city engineers and technicians of tomorrow?

Page 15: Smart Cities Day 2 Urban Innovation

Future Cities working group

• What does success look like? ....

• What personas, skills and approaches are needed...

– the multi-disciplinary engineer ...

– the user centric engineer...

– the community-engaged engineer ...

– the convergent engineer ...

– the entrepreneurial engineer!

Page 16: Smart Cities Day 2 Urban Innovation

Future Cities working group

Come help us develop the learnings, support and workforce needed.

Rick Hartwig

Built Environment Lead

[email protected]

Page 17: Smart Cities Day 2 Urban Innovation

Creating and building IoT enabled Cities

THINGS CONNECTED NETWORK &INNOVATION PROGRAMME

Jumpstarting UK’s LPWAN eco-system

Peter Karney

Head of Product Innovation & Design

2nd January 2017

Page 18: Smart Cities Day 2 Urban Innovation

• Applied R&D to accelerate economic

growth and productivity for the UK

• Combines tech and business expertise

• A not-for-profit, private limited company

• Completely neutral

DIGITAL CATAPULT

Page 19: Smart Cities Day 2 Urban Innovation

STRATEGY FOR GROWTH

Focus on key technology layers – where we can make a

difference

Work at the intersections of emerging technologies and

target markets

Action closer to startups and scaleups, academics and

corporates

Page 20: Smart Cities Day 2 Urban Innovation

KEY ENABLING TECHNOLOGY

LAYERS

Data-driven – personal data, privacy, trust, cyber-security and

blockchain

Connected – Internet of Things, 5G, low-powered wide area

networks

Intelligent – machine learning and artificial intelligence

Immersive – virtual reality, augmented reality, haptics, new

forms of human machine interface

Page 21: Smart Cities Day 2 Urban Innovation

Things Connectedwww.thingsconnected.net

The Journey

Page 22: Smart Cities Day 2 Urban Innovation

2100 BC?

Page 23: Smart Cities Day 2 Urban Innovation

• Ancient China, soldiers stationed along the

Great Wall would alert each other of impending

enemy attack by signalling from tower to tower.

In this way, they were able to transmit a

message as far away as 750 kilometres (470

mi) in just a few hours

2100 BC

Page 24: Smart Cities Day 2 Urban Innovation

• Polybius, a Greek historian, devised a more complex system of alphabetical smoke signals around 150 BCE, which converted Greek alphabetic characters into numeric characters.

It enabled messages to be easily signalled by holding sets of torches in pairs. This idea, known as the "Polybius square", also lends itself to cryptography and steganography. This cryptographic concept has been used with Japanese Hiragana and the Germans in the later years of the First World War.

150 BC

Page 25: Smart Cities Day 2 Urban Innovation

• On 13 May 1897, Marconi sent the world's first

ever wireless communication over open sea.

The experiment, based in Wales, witnessed a

message transversed over the Bristol Channel

from Flat Holm Island to Lavernock Point in

Penarth, a distance of 6 kilometres (3.7 mi).

The message read "Are you ready".

1897

Page 26: Smart Cities Day 2 Urban Innovation

• The first official UK mobile phone call was

made by comedian Ernie Wise on New Year’s

Day 1985. But an earlier call was made that day

to Sir Ernest Harrison, chairman of what was

then Racal Vodafone, by his son Michael, who

said: “Hi, it’s Mike. Happy New Year. This is the

first-ever call on a UK mobile network.”

1985

Page 27: Smart Cities Day 2 Urban Innovation

• The concept of the Internet of Things was

invented by and term coined by Peter T. Lewis

in September 1985 in a speech he delivered at

a U.S. Federal Communications Commission.

• Kevin Ashton supposedly coined the phrase

"Internet of Things" while working for Procter

& Gamble in 1999.

1985 or 1999

Page 28: Smart Cities Day 2 Urban Innovation

Connectivity

• For any smart city initiative

connectivity is key

Page 29: Smart Cities Day 2 Urban Innovation

CONNECTIVITY– short range

Source: https://www.opensensors.io/connectivity

BLE WIFI Thread ZigBee Zwave

Range 80m 50m Mesh 100m/Mesh 30m/Mesh

Indoor performance No No No - -

Freq band 2.4GHz 2.4 GHz 2.4Ghz 915Mhz/2.4GHz

900Mhz

ISM Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes

Fully bi-directional Yes Yes - Yes Yes

Data rate <1Mbps <600Mbps

- 250kps 10-100kps

Power profile Medium High Low Low Low

Authentication Device trust difficult

Yes Yes Yes Yes

E2E encryption Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes

OTA SW upgrade Yes Yes - Yes Yes

Page 30: Smart Cities Day 2 Urban Innovation

Low Power Technologies

Page 31: Smart Cities Day 2 Urban Innovation

CONNECTIVITY– longer range, low power

LORA Neul NWave SigFox Weight less-N

Weightless-P

Cellular

Range (km) 2-5urban45 rural

Up to 10 Up to 10 <10 urban, 50 rural

5 2 35 (GSM)200 (3G/4G)

Deep Indoor performance

yes ISM yes, WS no

yes yes yes yes No

Freq band Varies,subGHz

ISM or WS SubGHz Freq indep868/902

SubGHz SubGHz

800/1800/1900/2100 MHz

ISM Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes depends

Fully bi-directional

Depends Yes No No Uplink Yes Yes

Data rate 0.3-50 kbps

10-100 kbps

100 bps 10-1000bps

30-100kbps

Up 100kbps

35-170k (gsm), 3-10Mbps (LTE)

Power profile Low Low Low Low Low Low Medium

Authentication Yes - Yes Yes Yes Yes High security

E2E encryption Yes - Yes Yes Yes Yes

OTA SW upgrade Yes - No No No Yes Yes

Source: https://www.opensensors.io/connectivity

Page 32: Smart Cities Day 2 Urban Innovation

LPWAN COMPLEMENTARITY

Page 33: Smart Cities Day 2 Urban Innovation

DEVICE & CONNECTIVITY REQUIREMENTS

[Source: Ericsson, 2016]

Page 34: Smart Cities Day 2 Urban Innovation

LPWAN SERVICE PROPERTIES

• Battery life

• Transmit modes

• Message delivery guarantees

• Latency

• Scalability

• Data rates

• Coverage

• Security

• Device costs

Essential service attributes

Avg No Message / day

Typical battery life

5 (e.g. smart metering) > 10 years

10 (e.g. environmental sensing)

>7 years

50 (parking sensors) > 5 years

100 (e.g. location tracking)

> 2 years

Source: Beecham Research

Page 35: Smart Cities Day 2 Urban Innovation

TYPICAL IOT SYSTEM ARCHITECTURE

IoT Device

IoT Gateway

IoT Cloud

Basic processingShort/wide commsSensing/actuation

Edge analytics Fast control

Short/wide commsLocal storage

Service hostingVisualisations

Advanced analyticsSlow controlData storage

Page 36: Smart Cities Day 2 Urban Innovation

POTENTIAL LPWAN SERVICES

[Source: Beecham Research, 2016]

Page 37: Smart Cities Day 2 Urban Innovation

TOP LPWAN APPLICATIONS

Smart metering

Tank monitoring and delivery automation

Asset tracking (GPS and non-GPS)

Home alarm systems

Light management

Observations from LPWA2016

Early adoption of the current market / promising business cases

Water metering

Precision Livestock Management

Asset Tracking (Not real time) -Vehicle Recovery

Smart buttons

Home alarm systems

Air Quality Monitoring

Insights provided by Beecham research

Page 38: Smart Cities Day 2 Urban Innovation

LPWAN MARKET SHARE BY SECTOR

[Source: Infoholic Research, 2016]

Estimated market share by end of 2016

Page 39: Smart Cities Day 2 Urban Innovation

THE OPPORTUNITY 21Bio Devices by 2020Gartner

$1.7 trillion by 2020 IDC

38Bio Devicesby 2020Juniper

26 Bio Devicesby 2020Ericsson

20-30 Bio Devices by 2020McKinsey

100Bio Devices by 2025Huawei

$3.9-$11.1 trillion by 2020McKinsey

Page 40: Smart Cities Day 2 Urban Innovation

PUBLIC LPWAN NETWORKS TODAY

Footprint in 24 countries

Extensive coverage in Spain and France

France (Orange, Bouygues)

Belgium (Proximus)

Netherlands (KPN)

Swiss (Swisscom)

US (Senet)

India (Tata Communications)

Korea (SK Telecom)

So far deployed 38 private networks across the globe

Planning footprint in 25 countries, mostly in US and Asia)

RPMA

Page 41: Smart Cities Day 2 Urban Innovation

• Free to use

• Test and develop your IoT

solutions in the real world

• Get your IoT solution to market

faster

• Become part of a growing

community of IoT entrepreneurs

and developers

• Regular workshops and events

www.thingsconnected.net

Page 42: Smart Cities Day 2 Urban Innovation

Partners

Page 43: Smart Cities Day 2 Urban Innovation

• 88 SME apply to join the DC program

• 18 SMEs apply for FCC Open Call

• LPWAN London Meetup group formed

Open Call and meetups

Page 44: Smart Cities Day 2 Urban Innovation

Things Connected

Page 45: Smart Cities Day 2 Urban Innovation

Things Connected

Please sign up and join us

www.thingsconnected.net

Page 46: Smart Cities Day 2 Urban Innovation

Questions

www.thingsconnected.net

Page 47: Smart Cities Day 2 Urban Innovation

Customising housing and homes

Michael Kohn, CEO, Stickyworld

#SmartCitiesUK

Page 48: Smart Cities Day 2 Urban Innovation

Smart working and digitization?

Page 49: Smart Cities Day 2 Urban Innovation

The Prize of Collaboration is Resilience.

Page 50: Smart Cities Day 2 Urban Innovation

How to build a city wide asset sharing network

Page 51: Smart Cities Day 2 Urban Innovation

Daniel Bede O’Connor

Head of Customer Happiness

[email protected]

Page 52: Smart Cities Day 2 Urban Innovation

Overview Surplus assets Matchmaking Internal external

Page 53: Smart Cities Day 2 Urban Innovation

Overview

Organizational >city level sharing of surplus assets

Review 2 UK case studies

Way forward

Page 54: Smart Cities Day 2 Urban Innovation

OverviewPeer to peer

Organisations

Page 55: Smart Cities Day 2 Urban Innovation

Why?

Collaboration?

Internal

External

Page 56: Smart Cities Day 2 Urban Innovation

Why?

The Wisdom of Crowds: Why the Many Are Smarter Than the Few

James Surowiecki

Page 57: Smart Cities Day 2 Urban Innovation

Why?

Page 58: Smart Cities Day 2 Urban Innovation

Collaboration

Nothing new

Reinvented

Internet/mobile

Resource pressure

Page 59: Smart Cities Day 2 Urban Innovation

Trusting strangers on the internet!

Page 60: Smart Cities Day 2 Urban Innovation

Something’s happening

Page 61: Smart Cities Day 2 Urban Innovation

Something’s happening

Page 62: Smart Cities Day 2 Urban Innovation

Something’s happening

Page 63: Smart Cities Day 2 Urban Innovation

Collaboration

Sharing

Collaborative

Notable examples?

Page 64: Smart Cities Day 2 Urban Innovation

Waste Manager

Newcastle University

Page 65: Smart Cities Day 2 Urban Innovation

These should never become waste

Page 66: Smart Cities Day 2 Urban Innovation

Internal Collaboration

Page 67: Smart Cities Day 2 Urban Innovation

Building Clearance

Page 68: Smart Cities Day 2 Urban Innovation

Building Clearance

Page 69: Smart Cities Day 2 Urban Innovation

Disposal of old

Page 70: Smart Cities Day 2 Urban Innovation

Delivery of new

Page 71: Smart Cities Day 2 Urban Innovation

SilosSame building

1 department disposing

1 department buying

No communication

Page 72: Smart Cities Day 2 Urban Innovation

Silos

Page 73: Smart Cities Day 2 Urban Innovation

Staff get visibility on what others have surplus in real time and in the future

Page 74: Smart Cities Day 2 Urban Innovation

One place on line.

Reduces emails

Reduces visits

Saves time

Improves safety

Increased participation

Page 75: Smart Cities Day 2 Urban Innovation

Wishlists

Direct transfer- no moving into storage reduces double handling

Page 76: Smart Cities Day 2 Urban Innovation

Watchlists

Plan building moves.

Direct transfer.

Page 77: Smart Cities Day 2 Urban Innovation

Friend requests

Page 78: Smart Cities Day 2 Urban Innovation

OrganisationalTownCity

Region wide redistribution network

Page 79: Smart Cities Day 2 Urban Innovation

Smart city?Dumb city?Of interest?

Nearly 10 million in savings

Return on investment of 5 times over guaranteed in first year

Best performers?

Page 80: Smart Cities Day 2 Urban Innovation

Win win win

Page 81: Smart Cities Day 2 Urban Innovation

Social

Page 82: Smart Cities Day 2 Urban Innovation

Demonstrate savings.

Metrics from NHS Tayside

Page 83: Smart Cities Day 2 Urban Innovation

City of SunderlandHighlights

Over 4 main partners + schools and 3rd sector

Combined savings of £700K

Strategic partnership between University, Municipal Council, Hospital and the Community Voluntary Service

50 tonnes of waste diverted from landfill locally

4500 tonnes of waste prevented in the supply chain

185 tonnes of supply chain CO2 emissions avoided

£25,000 of asset donation to local charity

100 jobs secured with savings

3 direct jobs created

Page 84: Smart Cities Day 2 Urban Innovation

SunderlandKey lessons

Prove in one organization

Start small- grow incrementally

Charity sector umbrella organization

Council= schools

Page 85: Smart Cities Day 2 Urban Innovation

Glasgow Highlights

4 Universities

Municipal Council (35K staff) and all of their schools

The health sector in the city (35K staff)

Glasgow Social Enterprise Network

Logistics provider is not for profit training up vulnerable members of society

Page 86: Smart Cities Day 2 Urban Innovation

Combined

Almost 1 million avoided procurement

160 tonnes of waste diverted from landfill locally

339 tonnes of supply chain CO2 emissions avoided

£100,000 of asset donation to local charity

Page 87: Smart Cities Day 2 Urban Innovation

Key Lessons from Glasgow

Demonstrate business advantages – easier sell

Use existing professional networks

Legal issues not unsurmountable

Big players in the city all have same issues around reuse of surplus assets

Group storage

Group logistics- transport costs must be minimized

Page 88: Smart Cities Day 2 Urban Innovation

Take home tip#1

Contact your equivalent

Other big players in the cityMunicipal CouncilHealthcareLarge private sectorUmbrella not for profit associations

Page 89: Smart Cities Day 2 Urban Innovation

Take home tip#2

Frame project around city collaborationSmart CityResilienceCircular Economy

Page 90: Smart Cities Day 2 Urban Innovation

Way Forward?

Video recording

Put email on sheet

Demo in your organisation or with partners

Page 91: Smart Cities Day 2 Urban Innovation

Daniel Bede O’Connor

Head of Customer Happiness

[email protected]

www.GetWarpIt.com

Page 92: Smart Cities Day 2 Urban Innovation

www.kn-i.com [email protected] @knownowinfo

Chris CooperFebruary 2nd 2017

Can smarter cities lead to a more human

experience?

Page 93: Smart Cities Day 2 Urban Innovation

www.kn-i.com [email protected] @knownowinfo

Est. 2014

Award Winning

Innovator of our own products

Innovate for our customers

Members of City Standards

Institute

Page 94: Smart Cities Day 2 Urban Innovation

www.kn-i.com [email protected] @knownowinfo

• PAS 181 Smart City Interoperability Framework

• https://www.bsigroup.com/en-GB/smart-cities/Smart-Cities-Standards-and-Publication/PAS-181-smart-cities-framework/

Page 97: Smart Cities Day 2 Urban Innovation

www.kn-i.com [email protected] @knownowinfo

Why smart cities are not yet flourishing

+ +

Page 98: Smart Cities Day 2 Urban Innovation

www.kn-i.com [email protected] @knownowinfo

http://americantesol.com/goteach/teach-english-songdo.html

Page 99: Smart Cities Day 2 Urban Innovation

www.kn-i.com [email protected] @knownowinfo

“Cities need to reflect the needs of the citizens that live,

work and play there”

http://www.bristolisopen.comhttp://futurecity.glasgow.gov.uk

Page 100: Smart Cities Day 2 Urban Innovation

www.kn-i.com [email protected] @knownowinfo

Regulatory Twisthttps://ico.org.uk/media/for-organisations/documents/1624219/preparing-for-the-gdpr-12-steps.pdf

Page 102: Smart Cities Day 2 Urban Innovation

www.kn-i.com [email protected] @knownowinfo

Citizen First

https://eu-smartcities.eu/content/citizen-city

http://www.citizenlab.co

https://meeco.me

Page 110: Smart Cities Day 2 Urban Innovation

www.kn-i.com [email protected] @knownowinfo

Where to Start?

• Enable Smart Grid clusters - new & retrofit

• Digital Infrastructure Investment - Connectivity & Skills

• Open Data Evidence Base - Citizen Engagement

Page 111: Smart Cities Day 2 Urban Innovation

www.kn-i.com [email protected] @knownowinfo

Can smarter cities lead to a more human experience?

Chris Cooper, CEng. CTO KnowNow Information Ltd

@MobilityCooper@Consentua@KnowNowCities

Yes…but us citizens need to tell our city leaders & stakeholders to embrace PAS 181 now.

Page 112: Smart Cities Day 2 Urban Innovation

Rob Monster

Chief Executive OfficerDigitalTown, Inc.

Smart Cities UK - February 2, 2017

How Cities can Compete

and Win in the Digital Age

Page 113: Smart Cities Day 2 Urban Innovation

Introduction & Acknowledgements

Page 114: Smart Cities Day 2 Urban Innovation

Topics

A Brief History of Smart Cities

What is Broken about Smart Cities Today?

What Smart Cities can learn from dominant

Platforms

The rise of Platform

Cooperativism

DigitalTown’sSmart City

Architecture

A Smart City Framework for Smart Growth

Page 115: Smart Cities Day 2 Urban Innovation

In the beginning…

The goal of the Web is to serve humanity. We build it now so that those who come to it later will be able to create things that we cannot ourselves imagine.

- Tim Berners-Lee

Page 116: Smart Cities Day 2 Urban Innovation

By 2009, 25% of the world is online!

Page 117: Smart Cities Day 2 Urban Innovation

And in 2009, the Internet went Mobile and became Ubiquitous!

Page 118: Smart Cities Day 2 Urban Innovation

And with Internet Ubiquity came Industry Disruption

More and more major businesses and industries are being run on software and delivered as online services—from movies to agriculture to national defense. Many of the winners are Silicon Valley-style entrepreneurial technology companies that are invading and overturning established industry structures. Over the next 10 years, I expect many more industries to be disrupted by software, with new world-beating Silicon Valley companies doing the disruption in more cases than not.

Marc AndreessenWhy Software Is Eating The World

2011

Page 119: Smart Cities Day 2 Urban Innovation

More powerful phones means more disruption

The world's most popular media ownerCREATES NO CONTENT

The most valuable retailerHAS NO INVENTORY

The largest accommodation provider OWNS NO REAL ESTATE

The world's largest taxi companyOWNS NO VEHICLES

Page 120: Smart Cities Day 2 Urban Innovation

The Taxi industry is a notable victim

Page 121: Smart Cities Day 2 Urban Innovation

And newspapers may go the way of the buggy whip

Page 122: Smart Cities Day 2 Urban Innovation

1996-2005Hardware Centric

(W. Mitchell, Cairney, Speak, et al)Infrastructure-intensive solutions

2006-2011Human Resource Centric

( Coe; Partridge; Berry and Glaeser)Participatory Governance, Facilitated

Cooperation through ICT

2012-2016Technology Centric

(R.M. Kanter, S.S. Litow, T. Campbell, etc!) Localized Smart Cities, Open Data, Mobile Apps,

Co-Creation/Sharing Economy

2017 and BeyondUser-Centric Transactional Platform

(DigitalTown, etc.)Frictionless/Single-Sign-On, Personalized, Self-

Funding, Platform Cooperativism

Meanwhile in another galaxy called “Smart Cities” …

Page 123: Smart Cities Day 2 Urban Innovation

What is broken about Smart Cities Today?

Mostly Tax/Debt funded projects without

sustainable economic models

Private sector operated platforms are

approaching monopoly status

Stand-alone Smart City Deployments lack

interoperability built on model best practices

Page 124: Smart Cities Day 2 Urban Innovation

The Rise of Platform Cooperativism

Page 125: Smart Cities Day 2 Urban Innovation

Platform Cooperativism for Smart Cities

Self-fundingFunded through

Transactions

OpenCloud Hosted, Open Data, Single Sign-on

DistributedFederated Ownership safeguards platform

Monopolies

Page 126: Smart Cities Day 2 Urban Innovation

The Downside of Centrally-owned Platforms

Profit-maximizing Companies naturally seek Monopoly Status

Page 127: Smart Cities Day 2 Urban Innovation

So what does a DigitalTown look like?

Page 128: Smart Cities Day 2 Urban Innovation

So what does a DigitalTown look like?

The City Website becomes the home page of the city to search, connect and transact

locally.

A mobile application and single-sign-on provides

instant access to public and private services.

A frictionless user experience is portable as members go

from city to city and town to town.

Page 129: Smart Cities Day 2 Urban Innovation

Components of the DigitalTown Smart Cloud

Smart CityLocally Operated Cloud

applications for public and private services

Open Data and Open APIs

Smart WalletShared Single-Sign-on across public and private services

IdentityReputation Location

Payment Methods, Personal Preferences

Availability/Calendar

Smart Web 23,000+ .CITY portals powers intelligent search for each city

Integration with next-generation domain extensions,

e.g. .CITY, .MENU, .ART, .HEALTH .STORE, etc

Page 130: Smart Cities Day 2 Urban Innovation

Smart City Framework for Smart Growth

Page 131: Smart Cities Day 2 Urban Innovation

Smart City Framework for Smart Growth

City GovernanceLeverage available technology to improve usability of public services

Economic DevelopmentGrow the Local Economy and Attract Capital through “Smart”

Branding

Civic EngagementPartner with Community to co-create Quality of Life

Digital InclusionEquip stakeholders at all levels to participate

Smart TourismEmpower visitors through

Smart Wayfinding

Page 132: Smart Cities Day 2 Urban Innovation

City Governance

Web and Mobile-friendly info access

Single Sign On acrossall City Services

Smart Searchavailable 24/7

Leverage technology to improve usability and efficiency of public services

Efficiencies frees up personnel to work on self-funding Smart City initiatives

Page 133: Smart Cities Day 2 Urban Innovation

Economic Development

Keep Funds in the Local Economy

The 6 Pillars of Local Consumption: Retail, Services, Dining, Lodging, Property, Transportation

Countering the “Extraction Economy” via local e-Commerce

Search Local, Connect Local and Buy Local. Accessible 24/7 via web and mobile

Smart Buying Guides lets consumers shop like an informed local (e.g Seattle.Menu)

Shared Infrastructure for Local Delivery

Transaction revenue and capital access funds Civic Engagement

Page 134: Smart Cities Day 2 Urban Innovation

Civic Engagement

Mobile Apps for citizen vigilance – next-generation Blockwatch Real-time alerts based on geo-fence location for public safety risks Citizen aggregation of video cameras

Community Policing

Partnering with Community for Quality of Life

Civic Engagement gets residents involved

Problem Resolution

Mobile reporting of city problems, e.g. blocked drain, pothole, etc. Allow community to not just report problems but solve them too! Accrue Reputation Asset

Page 135: Smart Cities Day 2 Urban Innovation

Digital Inclusion

Digitally Challenged Every merchant gets a Digital store at no cost Every consumer has a Digital Wallet at no cost

Economically Challenged Not “Unemployed”. “Starting Up”. Send and Receive funds without fees

Physically Challenged More work from home work opportunities More opportunities for “shut-ins” to interact

Increased opportunities to identify and develop latent productive capacity

Equip all stakeholders to participate

Page 136: Smart Cities Day 2 Urban Innovation

Smart Tourism

Create a Culture of Visitor Inclusion

Culture and Technology combine to make tourists feel welcome

Shared multilingual platform for residents and tourists

By connecting like-minded persons, the residents become the attraction!

“See the World through Local Eyes”

Reinvent work flows around enabling technologies

Smart Telecom for wayfinding, shopping booking, delivery, and payment

Tourists as “Prosumers” who participate in the process from end to end

See -> Engage-> Transact -> Deliver Share

Acknowledgment: Prof. Dimitrios Buhalis, Bournemout, Univ.

First-time Visits become memorable Experiences cemented by Relationships

Page 137: Smart Cities Day 2 Urban Innovation

Practical Considerations and Closing Thoughts

Creating a Smart City is a Process not an Event. It should feel like a movement with a shared mission.

City management itself may not lead the multi-stakeholder buy-

in process

Merchant participation may start with smaller retailers and

virtual operators before larger retailers

There will early adopters, late adopters and non-adopters

Page 138: Smart Cities Day 2 Urban Innovation

Rob Monster

President and CEO

(425) 295-4564

[email protected]

Page 139: Smart Cities Day 2 Urban Innovation

Refreshments & Expo

#SmartCitiesUK

Page 140: Smart Cities Day 2 Urban Innovation

Welcome back

#SmartCitiesUK

Page 141: Smart Cities Day 2 Urban Innovation

Big Data insight to support citizen engagement

Page 142: Smart Cities Day 2 Urban Innovation

1 C

hal

len

ge London’ challenges – population growth2

Sh

arin

g3

An

alyt

ics

4 Io

T5

Mar

ket

Page 143: Smart Cities Day 2 Urban Innovation

London’ challenges - decentralised services

Greater London Authority – Strategic Planning• Transport for London• Mayor’s Office for Policing & Crime• London Fire Brigade• Olympic Legacy Corporation• London & Partners

33 London Boroughs – Planning, Social Services, schools, waste, local roads

Academies & free schools

National Health Service• Hospitals• GPs• London Ambulance Service

Utility Companies• Water• Gas• Electricity• Telecoms

1 C

hal

len

ge2

Sh

arin

g3

An

alyt

ics

4 Io

T5

Mar

ket

Page 144: Smart Cities Day 2 Urban Innovation

1 C

hal

len

ge2

Sh

arin

g3

An

alyt

ics

4 Io

T5

Mar

ket

How can data sharing, data science

and Smart Cities technology help?

Page 145: Smart Cities Day 2 Urban Innovation

Federation of data stores, allowing

secure sharing of catalogues &/or data1 C

hal

len

ge3

An

alyt

ics

4 Io

T5

Mar

ket

2 S

har

ing

Page 146: Smart Cities Day 2 Urban Innovation

Federation of data stores, allowing

secure sharing of catalogues &/or data

• Open Source• Open APIs• Sharing knowledge with other cities• Cloud-based

1 C

hal

len

ge3

An

alyt

ics

4 Io

T5

Mar

ket

2 S

har

ing

Page 147: Smart Cities Day 2 Urban Innovation

London DataStore - upgraded to use CKAN, building on data.gov.uk- publishers have their own area- new searching and filtering tools

1 C

hal

len

ge3

An

alyt

ics

4 Io

T5

Mar

ket

2 S

har

ing

Page 148: Smart Cities Day 2 Urban Innovation

London DataStore - Harvesting- API - MyLondon

1 C

hal

len

ge3

An

alyt

ics

4 Io

T5

Mar

ket

2 S

har

ing

Page 149: Smart Cities Day 2 Urban Innovation

City DataStore - hold our analytical data- better support our predictive modelling

1 C

hal

len

ge3

An

alyt

ics

4 Io

T5

Mar

ket

2 S

har

ing

Page 150: Smart Cities Day 2 Urban Innovation

City DataStore - hold our analytical data- better support our predictive modelling

Boroughs

GLA family

Researchers

Central govt.

1 C

hal

len

ge3

An

alyt

ics

4 Io

T5

Mar

ket

2 S

har

ing

Page 151: Smart Cities Day 2 Urban Innovation

Dashboard

LDS II

London DataStore – number of visitors Data

Strategy

1 C

hal

len

ge3

An

alyt

ics

4 Io

T5

Mar

ket

2 S

har

ing

Page 152: Smart Cities Day 2 Urban Innovation

London DataStore – types of visitor1

Ch

alle

nge

3 A

nal

ytic

s4

IoT

5 M

arke

t2

Sh

arin

g

Page 153: Smart Cities Day 2 Urban Innovation

London DataStore – downloads1

Ch

alle

nge

3 A

nal

ytic

s4

IoT

5 M

arke

t2

Sh

arin

g

Page 154: Smart Cities Day 2 Urban Innovation

Schools Atlas1

Ch

alle

nge

3 A

nal

ytic

s4

IoT

5 M

arke

t2

Sh

arin

g

Page 155: Smart Cities Day 2 Urban Innovation

Schools Atlas - https://maps.london.gov.uk/schools/1

Ch

alle

nge

3 A

nal

ytic

s4

IoT

5 M

arke

t2

Sh

arin

g

Page 156: Smart Cities Day 2 Urban Innovation

Business start up spaces1

Ch

alle

nge

3 A

nal

ytic

s4

IoT

5 M

arke

t2

Sh

arin

g

Page 157: Smart Cities Day 2 Urban Innovation

A City of Sensors

Explore different scenarios:

• Better predict and manage heatand power demand

• More efficient heat networks

• Air quality monitoring

• Parking space utilisation

• TfL asset management

1 C

hal

len

ge3

An

alyt

ics

4 Io

T5

Mar

ket

2 S

har

ing

Page 158: Smart Cities Day 2 Urban Innovation

City DataStore - hold our analytical data- better support our predictive modelling

1 C

hal

len

ge3

An

alyt

ics

4 Io

T5

Mar

ket

2 S

har

ing

Page 159: Smart Cities Day 2 Urban Innovation

City DataStore - explore practicalities of combining IoT data- new sources of data to inform policy- data market

1 C

hal

len

ge3

An

alyt

ics

4 Io

T5

Mar

ket

2 S

har

ing

Page 160: Smart Cities Day 2 Urban Innovation

City Data Strategy1

Ch

alle

nge

3 A

nal

ytic

s4

IoT

5 M

arke

t2

Sh

arin

g

Page 161: Smart Cities Day 2 Urban Innovation

City Data Strategy

Building the partnership of organisations and use cases

APIs, core reference data, standards

Licencing, business models, value of open data

responsible innovation with personal data, define data management strategies

oversee the ‘pipeline’ of data releases

The systems and platforms to support the other 5 themes

1 C

hal

len

ge3

An

alyt

ics

4 Io

T5

Mar

ket

2 S

har

ing

Page 162: Smart Cities Day 2 Urban Innovation

Paul HodgsonGIS & Infrastructure Manager

Greater London AuthorityCity Hall

The Queen’s WalkLondon SE1 2AA

[email protected]

data.london.gov.uk

Page 163: Smart Cities Day 2 Urban Innovation

Designing a Data Driven City

Milton Keynes by Rajinder Sharma, Commercial Manager for MK:SMART

Page 164: Smart Cities Day 2 Urban Innovation

Milton Keynes - Location

Page 165: Smart Cities Day 2 Urban Innovation

£16m Smart City/Big Data project partially

funded by a grant from HEFCE to develop

innovative solutions to support the significant

growth of Milton Keynes

Page 166: Smart Cities Day 2 Urban Innovation

Full Partners

AssociatePartners

Page 167: Smart Cities Day 2 Urban Innovation

Project Structure

167

Page 168: Smart Cities Day 2 Urban Innovation

Smart City – Business Opportunity

Page 169: Smart Cities Day 2 Urban Innovation

MK Data Hub

• Central to the project is the creation of a state of the art big data hub – ‘MK Data Hub’

• This will support the acquisition and management of vast amounts of data relevant to city’s systems

• Located in the heart of the city at University Campus Milton Keynes

Page 170: Smart Cities Day 2 Urban Innovation

MK Data Hub

The MK Data Hub will curate and make available a variety of

Big Data sources to 90 SME’s;

• Local and National Open Data resources – opening up of

non-personal data (data.gov.uk)

• Data streams from key infrastructure networks (energy,

transport, water etc)

• Relevant Sensor Networks ( weather, pollution)

• Satellite Data

• Data “crowdsourced” from social media or through

specialised apps such as Facebook, Twitter etc

• Wholesale Data – buyers and sellers can come together

Page 171: Smart Cities Day 2 Urban Innovation

Big Data

Page 172: Smart Cities Day 2 Urban Innovation

Data Science

MK Data Hub will also provide a range of new business

engagement services that will utilise advanced novel Big Data

science methods such as visual analytics, data mining,

predictive analysis which will analyse, enrich, annotate and

integrate data sources to transform “ raw” into “rich” data

Page 173: Smart Cities Day 2 Urban Innovation

Business Engagement Services

Apex suite and MK Data Hub

Hackathon Ask the expert

Web portal CPD training

Page 174: Smart Cities Day 2 Urban Innovation

Innovation Space

MK Data Hub

Application development

Product development

Student projects

Business seminars andWorkshops (CPD)

Page 175: Smart Cities Day 2 Urban Innovation

Example of Innovation

Page 176: Smart Cities Day 2 Urban Innovation

Energy

We are collecting data about driver behaviour in the city and devising new strategies on reducing peak hour demand. This includes coupling EV charging with solar electricity generation making use of local battery storage at home

We are collecting , collating and analysing Milton Keynes energy data to create a living energy Open Energy map that will empower local communities and businesses to understand energy trends. This will use a multiple of sources – citizens data, open data, satellite etc

Page 177: Smart Cities Day 2 Urban Innovation

Transport

• To combat traffic congestion in the fastest growing city in the UK, we are developing a city wide Transport App called Motion Map.

• Available to the public in 2017 and will show movements of people and vehicles across the city in real time

• It will include embedded timetables, car parking, bus and cycle information, crowd density and congestion

• Sensor based technology, small cameras and visual analytics will be used

• This will not only provide Citizens with access to personalised information but will allow community groups and business with a platform to build new cloud enabled transport services

Page 178: Smart Cities Day 2 Urban Innovation

MK Data Hub Launch Phase 1 – Monday 19th

October 2015

Page 179: Smart Cities Day 2 Urban Innovation

UKTI Inward Investment Officers MK:Smart

workshop at the Transport Catapult on 15th

October, 2015

Page 180: Smart Cities Day 2 Urban Innovation

Presentation to Smart Cities India event in

June, 2016

Page 181: Smart Cities Day 2 Urban Innovation

SME Workshops – Startups in Smart Cities on

15th December 2015 at UCMK

Page 182: Smart Cities Day 2 Urban Innovation

MK:Smart Graduate Fair -24th Feb 2016 at

UCMK

Page 183: Smart Cities Day 2 Urban Innovation

ThingWorx Developers Workshops

Page 184: Smart Cities Day 2 Urban Innovation

Opportunities for Start-Up/SME Business

• Growth of Cities & Population explosion around urban

areas

• Computer chips or Sensors are so cheap that they can be

pasted onto almost anything

• Wireless Connections & Computers that display their

output have become extremely cheap

• Setting up a business takes no time! – all you need is a

laptop, good broadband connection and cloud space

• In UK in 1980 there were 800,000 start-ups and now there

are 5.1m

Page 185: Smart Cities Day 2 Urban Innovation

The Sunday Times Supplement 28/06/15 by Raconteur Media

Page 186: Smart Cities Day 2 Urban Innovation

MK:Smart

Page 187: Smart Cities Day 2 Urban Innovation

Conclusion

• Foster Innovation, Enterprise and Creativity

• Currently actively engaged with 86 SME’s

• Develop the skills and close the learning “gap” surrounding

Big Data to provide solutions to solve ‘city issues’

• Work closely with our partners such as DIT, Invest Milton

Keynes and SEMLEP in fostering the economic

development of Milton Keynes

• MK:Smart to be a role model for other Smart City projects

worldwide

Page 188: Smart Cities Day 2 Urban Innovation

Contact Details

Rajinder Sharma

Commercial Manager, MK:SMART

University Campus Milton Keynes

Tel – 01908 295814

E-Mail – [email protected]

www.mksmart.org

Page 189: Smart Cities Day 2 Urban Innovation

Human centred approach to cities

and mobility

Scott Cain, CBO, Future Cities

Catapult

#SmartCitiesUK

Page 190: Smart Cities Day 2 Urban Innovation

Elevator Pitching - The EIT Smart

Cities Start-Up Challenge

#SmartCitiesUK

Page 191: Smart Cities Day 2 Urban Innovation

Lunch & Expo

#SmartCitiesUK

Page 192: Smart Cities Day 2 Urban Innovation

Welcome back

#SmartCitiesUK

Page 193: Smart Cities Day 2 Urban Innovation

R&D Tax Relief

Presentation for Accountancy Practises

Useful R&D Tax Credit Information

www.randdtax.co.uk

[email protected]

Tel. 01483 808301

Page 194: Smart Cities Day 2 Urban Innovation

“ Of the various tax instruments available to government, R&D Tax Credits have the advantage that they seek to help companies that are themselves prepared to invest in R&D. Government does not need to choose sectors or companies, with the result that R&D can be encouraged in the widest possible range of sectors, taking advantage of businesses’ own insights into likely breakthroughs”

From The Dyson Report on Innovation 2010

Page 195: Smart Cities Day 2 Urban Innovation

The Pure Gold Eggs that are worth between about 20% and 33% of R & D Costs -If your innovation is in science or technology

Source: HMRC / National Statistics - Research and Development Tax Credits StatisticsSeptember 2016

Page 196: Smart Cities Day 2 Urban Innovation

Source: HMRC / National Statistics - Research and Development Tax Credits StatisticsSeptember 2016

Page 197: Smart Cities Day 2 Urban Innovation

Application software developers

Software tool developers

BrewersFinancial

Services

CompaniesLegal Firms

Bailiffs

Winch makers

Test and Calibration companies

Manufacturers of machineryEngineering companies

Designer and manufacturer of industrial components

Refurbishing of industrial components

Injection Moulding

Industrial process control systemsMotor Industry

Manufacturers

IT infrastructureIce Cream

Security Systems Software

Page 198: Smart Cities Day 2 Urban Innovation

Introduction by HMRC of Advance Assurance.

For existing claimants the claim is made after their Financial year end as part of the normal Corporation Tax submission, and HMRC have the right to question the claim or supporting evidence of costs etc.

For new claimants turning over less that £2m, and employing less than 50 staff, since December 2015, they can request “Advance Assurance” from HMRC.

This would be agreed on a project by project basis in advance of the R&D being carried out, or at least in advance of a formal claim – but only claimed on submission of tax returns, so after the end of the financial year that the qualifying expenditure is incurred.

If agreed, HMRC will, or say they will, make no enquiries for three years, as long as the company sticks to the agreed plan.

In order to agree, HMRC will want to see a similar “justification” of the R&D as qualifying, as they would have to make in a normal retrospective claim, as well as estimated costs and duration of project.

Page 199: Smart Cities Day 2 Urban Innovation

Advantages

For young companies looking for funding, acceptance for advance assurance would provide evidence that HMRC would fund roughly between 19% and 33% of qualifying R&D costs.

Once agreed, and provided company sticks to plan, that contribution is secure – HMRC promise of no enquiries.

Potential Issues

Approval process would be time consuming with no guarantee of success. Hard to know what would happen if Company project was turned down,

then later the company claims in the normal way. The approval process will be handled electronically (web, email and phone)

by one HMRC R&D Unit. No obvious right of appeal if rejected. Every applicant’s project would be examined by an HMRC Inspector – right

now they themselves say that only about 5% of current retrospective claims are examined.

Page 200: Smart Cities Day 2 Urban Innovation

Situations where we can help

New Claimants where R&D has not been previously carried out or recognised.

Existing claimant where they want to be sure they are claiming all they are

entitled to claim and only what they are entitled to claim. Typically companies

say “ We have it all under control”.. We often find that they do not.

Existing claimants where HMRC have instigated enquiries into new or previous

claims or both.

Situations where companies are using other R&D Tax consultancies and want to

compare service levels and/or costs.

We offer a free audit on previous claims where there is still time for

amendments.

Where an Accountant is bidding to new clients and wants to demonstrate an

expertise in R&D Tax Credits.

Page 201: Smart Cities Day 2 Urban Innovation

R&D Tax Relief

Presentation for Accountancy Practises

Useful R&D Tax Credit Information

www.randdtax.co.uk

[email protected]

Tel. 01483 808301

Page 202: Smart Cities Day 2 Urban Innovation

Elevator Pitching - The Results

#SmartCitiesUK

Page 203: Smart Cities Day 2 Urban Innovation

Smart Routing

© 2016 InterDigital, Inc. All Rights Reserved.

Dr. Rafael CepedaInterDigital Europe, Ltd.

Smart Cities 20172nd February 2017

Page 204: Smart Cities Day 2 Urban Innovation

204 © 2016 InterDigital, Inc. All Rights Reserved.

Problem: The transport sector has evolved into a world of silos

City ATechnology X

Provider HIsolated

geographies Bespoke/incompatible solutions

Locked data

Page 205: Smart Cities Day 2 Urban Innovation

205 © 2016 InterDigital, Inc. All Rights Reserved.

Solution: Multi-region apps using IoT open-standards to close the data-traveler

value chain

Private Public Partnerships

Open Frameworks

Personalised & Effective information+ =

understanding data ecosystem

increased mobility

strong user data privacy

better data quality

environmental benefits & improvements

Page 206: Smart Cities Day 2 Urban Innovation

SmartRouting: Factsheet

© 2016 InterDigital, Inc. All Rights Reserved.

2

Socio-technical Expert

Use-case Owner

Mobile App Expert

Lead / Product & Service Design

Sponsor

www.smartrouting.co.uk

£ 1.3mTotal cost

Starting1st July 2016

5Multi-sectorpartners

Online & offline app operation

18MonthPROJECT

Platform Provider

Smart Routing

Page 207: Smart Cities Day 2 Urban Innovation

207 © 2016 InterDigital, Inc. All Rights Reserved.

I can plan my multi-modal journey across regions

I can review my route even if my smartphone is offline

I own and can trade my data if I want

SmartRouting: The Key Factors

Page 208: Smart Cities Day 2 Urban Innovation

208 © 2016 InterDigital, Inc. All Rights Reserved.

SmartRouting: The App

Page 209: Smart Cities Day 2 Urban Innovation

Predict upcoming journeys

Page 210: Smart Cities Day 2 Urban Innovation

Predict your next destinationbased on your travel pattern

Page 211: Smart Cities Day 2 Urban Innovation

Simple interface

Page 212: Smart Cities Day 2 Urban Innovation

Real-timemulti-modal itineraries

Page 213: Smart Cities Day 2 Urban Innovation

Services exposed to 3rd Parties

Android SDK

iOS SDK

Analytics Integrations Concept Applications Tools & SDKs

Authorization Proxy

Sensor Integrations

Geospatial

RepositoryFile Store Timeseries HyperCat

Developer Portal Data ImportUser Registry Config Service Metrics

DashboardsPlatform Portal Message Queue

Map

Event Experience

Data Broker

Cloud

Public Internet

Developers

Data Providers

Data Consumers

Data Services

Sector expert Socio-technical integration IoT Platform Provider

Use case owners

Data Sources

TM

is a trademark of the Partners Type 1 of oneM2M

SmartRouting: The Wider Picture

Page 214: Smart Cities Day 2 Urban Innovation

Use of wireless IoT networks to deliver value for smart cities

Mark Begbie, Business Development Director, CENSIS

[email protected]

Page 215: Smart Cities Day 2 Urban Innovation

Internet of Things

Page 216: Smart Cities Day 2 Urban Innovation

MANAGE

Product evolution demands connected sensing

The value of sensor and imaging systems is in transforming raw data into meaningful information

This enables businesses to:

Applications/Software

Devices/Hardware

Analysis &Post Processing

Data Repository

Communications& Networking

Sensor Element

POWER CONTROL

Page 217: Smart Cities Day 2 Urban Innovation

Mobile AQ system currently consists of two physical units: Node : collects data / manages the sensors

CO, PM (1/2.5/10), temp, humidity, pressure, + limited range NO, NO2 & O3.

Hub accepts data from the Node, adds GPS location, manages upload to cloud database.

A web-based user interface visualises data, allows interaction with the cloud services & includes capability to embed data processing and analytics outputs.

Units deployed on estates vehicles.

User Interface

Sensor Hub

Sensor NodeMicrosoft Azure Cloud Back-end

http://censis.org.uk/censis_projects/low-cost-mobile-aq-sensing/

Mobile AQ Monitoring

Page 218: Smart Cities Day 2 Urban Innovation

LPWAN for IoT

Page 219: Smart Cities Day 2 Urban Innovation

Where does LPWAN fit?

Licensed exempt ISM bands globally• 868MHz EU, 915MHz USA, ASIA 470MHz

Sub 1GHz has exceptional RF characteristics• Ideal for connecting sensors in:

Remote locations, long range >10Km

Deep inside buildings or underground

Designed for small IoT data packets • Less than 1000 bytes a day (typical)

• Long Battery life – up to 10 years

Simple network infrastructure • >10K end devices per base station/gateway

Low cost Capex and Opex

Essential for a heterogeneous IoT network• Up to 75% of IoT connections are predicted to be

viable for LPWAN in 2022

Data rate (Mbps)0.01 100

RFID

NFC

Bluetooth

ZigBeeWiFi

GSM – LTECellular

2G, 3G. 4G

IoTLPWAN

Satellite

LAN

WAN

Page 220: Smart Cities Day 2 Urban Innovation

Low Power Wide Area Network (LPWAN)

Low Cost

Low Power

Devices & Infrastructure

3-5 year battery life

Approx. 3km in urban areas

Long Range

Page 221: Smart Cities Day 2 Urban Innovation

Network management

Nodes report back to Stream data

collection infrastructure

IoT-X provides management,

monitoring and control to subscribers

Devices publish to feeds that are allocated per

company

Stream manage security of feeds

and separation of data

Stream Technologies Cloud Platform

Page 222: Smart Cities Day 2 Urban Innovation

What LoRa does deliver :

Transformative technology with positioning capability

Enabling IoT connectivity to new types of devices and applications in a cost effective manner

The infrastructure required for the development and scaling of new IoT offerings.

What LoRa does NOT deliver :

Internet connectivity to the disconnected

MAXIMUM data rate is <1% of an 8Meg link!

A means for transferring video, audio, etc.

A head-to-head competitor with cellular M2M

Low Power Wide Area Network (LPWAN)

Page 223: Smart Cities Day 2 Urban Innovation

Supporting Growth

Page 224: Smart Cities Day 2 Urban Innovation

Network Offering

Lowest possible barriers to entryFirst concept to finished product – pre-commercial

Seamless growth & scaling with needScale cost and resource as you grow – post commercial

Open architectureYour data

Collaborative ecosystem partneringLocal delivery and shared benefit

Global replicationFrom S/W to full deployment

Page 225: Smart Cities Day 2 Urban Innovation

The Sensor Systems StackFrom raw data to informed business decisions

MANAGE

Product evolution demands connected sensing

The value of sensor and imaging systems is in transforming raw data into meaningful information

This enables businesses to:

Applications/Software

• assess the value of data

• be targeted in datagathering

• gain insights

• act on the results

Devices/Hardware

Visualisation &Presentation

Analysis &Post Processing

Data Repository

Communications& Networking

Transductance &Pre-processing

Sensor Element

Presenting information to inform decisions

Converting the measured data to meaningful information

Storing, managing and organising data and its content

Transporting the data to a storage location

Converting changes to signals & prioritising valuable data

Detecting and measuring a change e.g. vibration, impacts, heart, light, energy, colour, temperature etc.

Information

Raw Data

POWER CONTROL

Page 226: Smart Cities Day 2 Urban Innovation

ORKNEY

GLASGOW

Our LoRa Networks – to date

RENFREW

INVERNESS

ABERDEEN

DUNDEE

Page 227: Smart Cities Day 2 Urban Innovation

Glasgow Deployment

Page 228: Smart Cities Day 2 Urban Innovation

Network layout and coverage

With only the first four gateways:

Scaling to more gateways in coming weeks

Page 229: Smart Cities Day 2 Urban Innovation

Geolocation Packet Receipt

LoRaWAN WebSocket Data Attempt WebSocket ReconnectCONNECTED: Wed Feb 1 2017 12:27:16 GMT+0000 (GMT Standard Time)

NetworkServerJSON:

{"device":"000db531176a354d","data":{"dev_eui":"000db531176a354d","DevAddr":"660702aa","f_port":2,"f_cnt_up":6840,"f_cnt_down":13998,"app_eui":"0011ab2f11fa7b2a","gateway_count":4,"gateway_info":[

{"mac":"7276fffffe01027e","gw_time":"2017-02-01T12:27:16.191805Z","gw_timestamp":1633456156,"frequency":868.5,"channel":0,"rf_chain":0,"crc_status":1,"modulation":"LORA","code_rate":"4/5","rssi":0,"snr":0,"size":24,"data_rate":{"LoRa":"SF12BW125","FSK":0}},{"mac":"7276fffffe010278","gw_time":"2017-02-01T12:27:16.191811Z","gw_timestamp":1862662164,"frequency":868.5,"channel":0,"rf_chain":0,"crc_status":1,"modulation":"LORA","code_rate":"4/5","rssi":0,"snr":0,"size":24,"data_rate":{"LoRa":"SF12BW125","FSK":0}},{"mac":"7276fffffe01027d","gw_time":"2017-02-01T12:27:16.191812Z","gw_timestamp":3514435044,"frequency":868.5,"channel":0,"rf_chain":0,"crc_status":1,"modulation":"LORA","code_rate":"4/5","rssi":0,"snr":0,"size":24,"data_rate":{"LoRa":"SF12BW125","FSK":0}},{"mac":"7276fffffe01039b","gw_time":"2017-02-01T12:27:16.191834Z","gw_timestamp":835677476,"frequency":868.5,"channel":0,"rf_chain":0,"crc_status":1,"modulation":"LORA","code_rate":"4/5","rssi":0,"snr":0,"size":24,"data_rate":{"LoRa":"SF12BW125","FSK":0}}

],"data":"AAJRA1Rclf++tws="}}

Page 230: Smart Cities Day 2 Urban Innovation

IoT Centre

SME challenges in fast track development of IoT products and services

• Demo space, drop-in centre, seminars, mentoring

• Engineering support• Access to latest development tools and

software

Developed with support that includes:

Page 231: Smart Cities Day 2 Urban Innovation

Wider Applications

Page 232: Smart Cities Day 2 Urban Innovation

Other LPWAN Applications

Wider

Applications

for IoT

Farming

Asset

Tracking

Remote

Health

CBM –

Equipment

Monitoring

SHM -Structural

Monitoring

Page 233: Smart Cities Day 2 Urban Innovation

@CENSIS121 censis.org.uk

Page 234: Smart Cities Day 2 Urban Innovation

Nick Chrissos

Head of Innovation Technology, Cisco UK and Ireland

Page 235: Smart Cities Day 2 Urban Innovation

Cisco Confidential 235© 2013-2014 Cisco and/or its affiliates. All rights reserved.

CityVerve has been selected because of its ambition, scale, coordination across public and private sector, and potential for success.

UK cities

34submissions

21finalists

6

Page 236: Smart Cities Day 2 Urban Innovation

Cisco Confidential 236© 2013-2014 Cisco and/or its affiliates. All rights reserved.

Building this smart city will take prudent planning,

trailblazing IoT technologies and a collective desire

for ongoing collaboration.

Innovation corridor

2km2IoT investment

£16mdelivery partners

20

Page 237: Smart Cities Day 2 Urban Innovation

Chronic Condition Management

• Focusing on COPD – the UK’s 5th biggest killer Testing

the ability of IoT interventions to improve self-care,

medication adherence and physical activity

• Providing individuaised patient feedback for better

care and early warnings detection

Community Wellness

• Sensor networks will support citizens in and outside

the home and digitally promote physical activity to

tackle heart disease, productivity, mental health and

general wellbeing

Neighborhood Team Support

• Improve the efficiency of the existing staff structure

• Enable care at the right time and right place.

Use Case Development

Cisco Confidential 237© 2013-2014 Cisco and/or its affiliates. All rights reserved.

Health & Social Care

Page 238: Smart Cities Day 2 Urban Innovation

Talkative Bus Stops

• To enhance the travel experience by making the use

of the Bus stops more interactive and engaging

• Positions Bus-stops as places of interest and make

public transport enjoyable , thereby increasing

patronage to public transport

• Promote local events, artists and a platform to

communicate City initiatives

Road Safety

• Improving road safety amongst high risk groups to

maintain a highly mobile economy and inclusive society

• Deploying telematics devices to assess individual drivers

and identify opportunity for interventions

• Reducing accidents and environmental emission

City Concierge• Ease of access to the city to help utilise and

promote the use of public transport to travellers.

Sensing Trams, eBike Sharing

Use Case Development

Cisco Confidential 238© 2013-2014 Cisco and/or its affiliates. All rights reserved.

Transport & Travel

Page 239: Smart Cities Day 2 Urban Innovation

Next Generation BMS

Compliance Cost Reduction

Building Retrofit Energy Reduction• Enhancing energy performance of existing

buldings

Smart Place Lighting

Smart Parking

• 30% of all traffic congestion is caused by drivers

searching for parking

• Street lighting infrastructure will be leveraged to

enable smart parking applications

• Addressing lost revenue and reducing pollution

Air Quality Monitoring

• Air quality is a major issue for cities worldwide

• Modelling, monitoring, analytics and applications will

provide a holistic air quality management approach

• This insight will then be fed into other CityVerve

themes i.e. travel & transport

Use Case Development

Cisco Confidential 239© 2013-2014 Cisco and/or its affiliates. All rights reserved.

Energy & Environment

Page 240: Smart Cities Day 2 Urban Innovation

Community Champions

• Citizens will sit at the heart of CityVerve

• A citizen forum will review use cases, and input to

development, usage and refinement

• Designed to simulate citizen-centric innovation and

drive community adoption of CityVerve

Social Platform

• For people living, working, studying and visiting the

Corridor

• Delivering local content around the interests and

activities on the Corridor

• Integrated into the city-wide WiFi network

IoT Art Installation

• 2 large scale IoT public realm installations

• Scope for installations to interplay with existing street

furniture

• Designed to engage communities in the potential of

IoT

Open Innovation• 12 months, 100s of proposals, 24 new IDEAS

Use Case Development & Citizen Engagement

Cisco Confidential 240© 2013-2014 Cisco and/or its affiliates. All rights reserved.

Culture & Public Realm

Page 241: Smart Cities Day 2 Urban Innovation

“The best way to predict the future is to

CREATE it”Abraham Lincoln

Page 242: Smart Cities Day 2 Urban Innovation

Innovation Partnerships: Designing for Population Health in Lancashire

Professor John Goodacre Associate Dean for Engagement and Innovation 2nd February 2017

Page 243: Smart Cities Day 2 Urban Innovation

Innovation Partnership

Driven by need to improve population health and healthcare in Lancashire

Offers prospect of enabling:

• New town / estate to benefit from "state of the art" knowledge, technologies and practices for supporting population health and wellbeing

• Residents to participate in ongoing co-creation of health innovations within local settings.

Innovation Partnership approach may offer exemplar model for other new towns and villages.

Page 244: Smart Cities Day 2 Urban Innovation

Themes

• Local health and care system: key challenges

• Lancaster University’s strategy

• Current developments: focus on linking major new infrastructure developments around Fylde area

• Major opportunity to advance population health in Lancashire

Page 245: Smart Cities Day 2 Urban Innovation

Health in Lancashire: Inequalities

Page 246: Smart Cities Day 2 Urban Innovation
Page 247: Smart Cities Day 2 Urban Innovation
Page 248: Smart Cities Day 2 Urban Innovation

Spend on “complex” individuals

Page 249: Smart Cities Day 2 Urban Innovation

Health: Funding gap in Lancashire

• By 2020/21, estimated gap between patient needs and public sector resource budgets in Lancashire = £805 million

• NHS Five year Forward View emphasises preventing ill health, redesigning services, harnessing innovation and technology, maximising value of NHS budget

• Essential approaches:

1. Address key lifestyle and behaviour change

2. Involve individuals and local communities

3. Join up services

Page 250: Smart Cities Day 2 Urban Innovation

Health and Medicine at Lancaster University

• Lancaster University: Strong national and international profile

• Faculty of Health and Medicine established 2008

• Pan-university, interdisciplinary – “One Lancaster” approach

• Engaged with all NHS organisations across Lancashire and Cumbria – “Health Hub”

• Enhance health and healthcare locally and globally

Page 251: Smart Cities Day 2 Urban Innovation

Lancaster Health Hub: connecting the whole University to the NHS

Lancaster University

BTHFT

F&W

CCG

HealthwatchLancashire

LCFT

LN

CCGLTHTR

MCFT

UHMBT

University of

Cumbria

Page 252: Smart Cities Day 2 Urban Innovation

Lancaster Health Innovation Campus: Vision

Create world-class centre of excellence for innovation in population health:

• Transform health care and practice regionally and internationally

• Significant impact on local health outcomes

• Major contribution to regional economic development

• Support service reform in public sector

Page 253: Smart Cities Day 2 Urban Innovation

Challenges

• Preventing illness in populations

• Ageing well

Page 254: Smart Cities Day 2 Urban Innovation

Solutions

Interdisciplinary, cross-sectoral platforms:

• Digital Health

• Healthy Spaces

• Healthy Materials and Technologies

• People factors in innovation

• Creating and implementing sustainable innovation: systems and processes

Page 255: Smart Cities Day 2 Urban Innovation

Features

• Globally-unique testbed ecosystem: Creating, developing, evaluating, delivering and sustaining new health products and practices

• Drive and support innovations for rural and dispersed, as well as urban, communities

• Link with other local and regional infrastructure development

Page 256: Smart Cities Day 2 Urban Innovation

Lancaster Health Innovation Campus

Page 257: Smart Cities Day 2 Urban Innovation

Phase I

Page 258: Smart Cities Day 2 Urban Innovation

External impressions

West side looking towards main entrance

Verified view from A6

Page 259: Smart Cities Day 2 Urban Innovation

Internal impressions

Example image

Main entrance Business lounge

Circulation space ‘The street’

Page 260: Smart Cities Day 2 Urban Innovation

Street section

Example image

Page 261: Smart Cities Day 2 Urban Innovation

Link with other major local infrastructure

Strategic partnership with:

• NHS England Test Bed (Lancashire and Cumbria Innovation Alliance)

• NHS England Healthy New Town (Whyndyke Garden Village)

“A unique co-development of local innovation infrastructure”

Page 262: Smart Cities Day 2 Urban Innovation

Test Bed programme

#LCIATestBed @NHSTestBeds @LancashireCare @LHHub

Page 263: Smart Cities Day 2 Urban Innovation

Purpose

• Innovative technology to support frail elderly people with dementia and other long term conditions to remain well in community and avoid unnecessary hospital admissions.

• Two year programme, £1.7k

Page 264: Smart Cities Day 2 Urban Innovation

Location

Fylde Coast Vanguard: Blackpool, Fylde and Wyre.

Better Care Together Vanguard: North Lancashire and South Cumbria.

Page 265: Smart Cities Day 2 Urban Innovation

Partners

Innovators•Philips

•Speakset

•Cambridge Cognition

•uMotif

• Intelesant

•NHS Simple

•Tinder Foundation

Delivery•Fylde Coast Vanguard•Better Care Together Vanguard

Evaluation•Lancaster University Centre for Ageing Research (C4AR)

Governance•Lancashire Care NHS Foundation Trust•Lancaster Health Hub•NWC Innovation Agency

Page 266: Smart Cities Day 2 Urban Innovation

Cohorts

Cohort 1

Cohort 2

Cohort 3

Cohort 4

>55 >25% COPD, HF, Diabetes

>55 >10-25% COPD, HF, Diabetes

>55 <10%COPD, HF, Diabetes, Asthma,

CHD, Hypertension

Mild Dementia MMSE 20-26

Page 267: Smart Cities Day 2 Urban Innovation

Knowledge Base

SMEs

Page 268: Smart Cities Day 2 Urban Innovation

Healthy New Town programme

Page 269: Smart Cities Day 2 Urban Innovation

NHSE Healthy New Towns:10 Demonstrator Sites

• Whitehill & Bordon, Hampshire: 3,350 new homes on former army barracks

• Cranbrook, Devon: 8,000 new residential units

• Darlington: 2,500 residential units across 3 linked sites in Eastern Growth Zone

• Barking Riverside: 10,800 residential units on London’s largest brownfield site

• Whyndyke Farm in Fylde, Lancashire: 1,400 residential units

• Halton Lea, Runcorn: 800 residential units

• Bicester, Oxon: 393 houses in the Elmsbrook project, part of 13,000 new homes planned

• Northstowe, Cambridgeshire: 10,000 homes on former military land

• Ebbsfleet Garden City, Kent: up to 15,000 new homes

• Barton Park, Oxford: 885 residential units

https://www.england.nhs.uk/ourwork/innovation/healthy-new-towns/

Page 270: Smart Cities Day 2 Urban Innovation

Whyndyke Garden Village

• Fylde Coast

• 90% Fylde, 10% Blackpool Council

• Near M55

• 1,400 homes, 20% affordable

• Community facilities

• Employment land

Page 271: Smart Cities Day 2 Urban Innovation

Whyndyke Garden Village Partners

Stakeholders include residents, carers/families, employees, adjacent and nearby communities, local health and care services, the voluntary, community, social enterprise sector (VCSE) and key partners:

Page 272: Smart Cities Day 2 Urban Innovation

Whyndyke Garden Village

Five priorities:

1. Bring in new ways to access health

2. Encourage people to stay active and well

3. Develop facilities which promote health

4. Build Dementia friendly homes & communities

5. Use innovative technology to manage health

Page 273: Smart Cities Day 2 Urban Innovation

Summary

Lancashire as example of:

• Strong cross-sectoral partnership approach toward innovation in population health

• Co-creation and co-location of major infrastructure programmes, with potential for significant impact

• Building quickly on local strengths, engagement and momentum

[email protected]

@john_goodacre

Page 274: Smart Cities Day 2 Urban Innovation

Chair’s concluding comments

Rick Hartwig, Head of Sector,

Built Environment, The Institution

of Engineering and Technology

#SmartCitiesUK