{"id":2634,"date":"2017-06-15T14:36:35","date_gmt":"2017-06-15T12:36:35","guid":{"rendered":"http:\/\/www.revistaitransporte.com\/?p=2634"},"modified":"2017-06-19T10:22:45","modified_gmt":"2017-06-19T08:22:45","slug":"the-new-vision-of-the-smart-city","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/www.revistaitransporte.com\/the-new-vision-of-the-smart-city\/","title":{"rendered":"The new vision of the smart city"},"content":{"rendered":"
While there are still shortcomings in the communication and dissemination of all the initiatives that have been implemented thus far and all the work that has been done to promote the application of new technologies in the improvement of the efficiency of services, and ultimately, the quality of life of citizens, we are beginning to feel the transformation of our cities. Spain is a pioneer and an international point of reference in the development of smart cities thanks to its National Smart Cities Plan. This plan is based on three fundamental pillars: standardization, governance and industry.<\/p>\n
The standardization process is centred on the development of the industrial fabric, thanks to the concepts of reuse and interoperability of technological solutions. There are currently 20 UNE standards published within the sphere of Smart Cities, four of them recognised by the ITU as recommendations (Interoperability – ITU-T Y.SSCP,<\/b> Open data – Y.ODI,<\/b> Tourist Destinations – Y.STD<\/b> and Development of Rural Environments – Y.SRC),<\/b> and more than 20 new standards in progress. Regulatory development concerning smart cities is carried out by the Spanish Association of Standardization (UNE), specifically the Technical Committee for Spanish Standardization on Smart Cities CTN178, of which Ineco is a member. As a result, Spain has developed an important international presence thanks to the strong policy development in this area.<\/p>\n
In regard to governance, Spain represents a unique model in the world thanks to the fact that all the agents involved have been part of the development of smart cities. From an institutional point of view, there is coordination of the five ministries with competencies associated with smart cities: Ministry of Finance and Civil Service (MINHAFP), Ministry of Public Works (MFOM), Ministry of Energy, Tourism and the Digital Agenda (MINETAD), Ministry of Agriculture and Fisheries, Food and Environment (MAPAMA) and Ministry of Economy, Industry and Competitiveness (MINECO). To represent the cities, the Spanish Network of Smart Cities (RECI), is formed of 82 cities that account for 40% of the total Spanish population. Representing the industry point of view are the AMETIC (Association of Electronics, Information and Communications Technologies, Telecommunications and Digital Content Companies), CONETIC (Spanish Confederation of Information Technology, Communications and Electronics Companies), GICI (Smart Cities Interplatform Working Group) as well as the sector representatives.<\/p>\n
Spain is a pioneer and an international point of reference in the development of smart cities thanks to its National Smart Cities’ Plan<\/p><\/blockquote>\n
Finally, as far as industry is concerned, both consolidated and emerging industries are available. Additionally, in order to speed up adoption on the part of industry, subsidies for smart city initiatives were announced in 2014 (15 million Euros), 2015 (63 million Euros) and for smart islands in 2015 (30 million Euros). Thanks to our National Smart Cities Plan, innovation and development of the industrial fabric have been made possible, providing realistic technological solutions for cities.<\/p>\n
In this area, Ineco works with the Secretary of State for the Information Society and Digital Agenda (SESIAD) at the heart of the National Smart Cities’ Plan through the coordination of public and private initiatives of smart cities and their modelling and dissemination at national and international levels, contributing its extensive experience in the field of smart cities through an expert team of consultants in information technologies and ‘smart products’. <\/i>In recent years, technological solutions have been implemented for different verticals, especially for the internal management systems of town halls, which often work behind the scenes without citizens being aware them. A vertical could be described as a technological solution aimed at a specific service in a city, such as the management of lighting. These solutions have traditionally been responsible for the control and monitoring of the associated devices.<\/p>\n
Other more modern examples include smart car park solutions or traffic optimization solutions, such as the ones developed by Ineco for the mobility vertical in the Cityneco ecosystem, energy efficiency systems, smart irrigation, or measurements of pollutant emissions in the environment vertical, management indicator dashboards, citizen portals and mobile applications for interaction with citizens in the vertical of smart government, and a large variety of products deployed in our cities.<\/p>\n
Local intelligence serving global mobility<\/h3>\n
Our cities are beginning to develop true intelligence. Cities such as Santander, M\u00e1laga, Madrid, Valencia, Barcelona and Valladolid have made very significant progress, but it is time to make the leap to the next level and this progress will require two concepts: the vision of the city as interconnected objects and interoperability of the city’s different platforms.<\/h5>\n
Up to this point, cities have been viewed from the perspective of the services that city councils provided to the citizens. For this reason, the solutions that have been developed have focused on improving the efficiency of these services. But as the development of smart cities has evolved, it has been noted that urban environments have a number of elements that have their own entity, with their own characteristics and needs, and which, though they are not services that constitute a management vertical, do need to be integrated into the brain of the city that is the city platform.<\/p>\n
Some examples are the stations, airports, ports and the smart buildings themselves. These elements have a high level of automation and are becoming increasingly intelligent thanks to the intensive use of ICT, but it is necessary to avoid their isolation within the city.<\/p>\n