A Unified Smart City Model (USCM) for Smart City conceptualization and benchmarking

Book Chapter (2018)
Author(s)

Leonidas Anthopoulos

M.F.W.H.A. Janssen (TU Delft - Information and Communication Technology)

Vishanth Weerakkody (Brunel University)

Research Group
Information and Communication Technology
Copyright
© 2018 Leonidas Anthopoulos, M.F.W.H.A. Janssen, Vishanth Weerakkody
DOI related publication
https://doi.org/10.4018/978-1-5225-5646-6.ch025
More Info
expand_more
Publication Year
2018
Language
English
Copyright
© 2018 Leonidas Anthopoulos, M.F.W.H.A. Janssen, Vishanth Weerakkody
Research Group
Information and Communication Technology
Bibliographical Note
Green Open Access added to TU Delft Institutional Repository ‘You share, we take care!’ – Taverne project https://www.openaccess.nl/en/you-share-we-take-care Otherwise as indicated in the copyright section: the publisher is the copyright holder of this work and the author uses the Dutch legislation to make this work public.@en
Volume number
1-3
Pages (from-to)
523-540
ISBN (print)
['152255646X', '9781522556466']
ISBN (electronic)
9781522556473
Reuse Rights

Other than for strictly personal use, it is not permitted to download, forward or distribute the text or part of it, without the consent of the author(s) and/or copyright holder(s), unless the work is under an open content license such as Creative Commons.

Abstract

Smart cities have attracted an extensive and emerging interest from both science and industry with an increasing number of international examples emerging from all over the world. However, despite the significant role that smart cities can play to deal with recent urban challenges, the concept has been being criticized for not being able to realize its potential and for being a vendor hype. This paper reviews different conceptualization, benchmarks and evaluations of the smart city concept. Eight different classes of smart city conceptualization models have been discovered, which structure the unified conceptualization model and concern smart city facilities (i.e., energy, water, IoT etc.), services (i.e., health, education etc.), governance, planning and management, architecture, data and people. Benchmarking though is still ambiguous and different perspectives are followed by the researchers that measure -and recently monitor- various factors, which somehow exceed typical technological or urban characteristics. This can be attributed to the broadness of the smart city concept. This paper sheds light to parameters that can be measured and controlled in an attempt to improve smart city potential and leaves space for corresponding future research. More specifically, smart city progress, local capacity, vulnerabilities for resilience and policy impact are only some of the variants that scholars pay attention to measure and control.

Files

A_Unified_Smart_City_Model.pdf
(pdf | 0.341 Mb)
- Embargo expired in 01-06-2019
License info not available