CityNECO – ITRANSPORTE https://www.revistaitransporte.com TRANSPORT ENGINEERING & CONSULTANCY Mon, 02 Dec 2019 06:49:29 +0000 en-GB hourly 1 https://wordpress.org/?v=5.9.4 Cityneco at Madrid and Barcelona https://www.revistaitransporte.com/cityneco-at-madrid-and-barcelona/ Wed, 27 Nov 2019 16:54:00 +0000 https://www.revistaitransporte.com/?p=3855

Carmen Librero, president of Ineco, and Lola Ortiz, chair of the Association of Civil Engineers of Madrid, visited the Innovation Tunnel of Madrid Civil Engineering Week, an event that was held from 1 to 6 October and during which the company showcased its Cityneco model to demonstrate how smart cities improve urban mobility.

Under the slogan Innovating to Make Progress, this major event in the sector was hosted by Madrid and featured different activities with the aim of bringing engineering closer to society. The tunnel, which was situated in the centrally-located Plaza de Callao, was visited by more than 30,000 people interested in learning about technological and innovative infrastructures.

The company also participated with its Cityneco model in the Spain Space of the Smart City Expo World Congress (SCEWC), the main international event dedicated to smart cities, which was held at the Fira de Barcelona. Each edition of the event, which receives more than 20,000 visitors, includes participation by 700 cities and more than 800 exhibitors from around the world. The event, which was held from 19 to 21 November under the slogan Cities Made of Dreams, has become a major fixture on the smart cities calendar and brings municipal representatives, institutions, academic and thought leaders, research centres, companies and entrepreneurs with major decision-making power together in one place.

SCEWC 2019 focused on five main themes related to the most pressing problems cities face: digital transformation, urban environment, mobility, governance and finance, and inclusive and shared cities.

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The G20 invites Ineco to participate in its seminars https://www.revistaitransporte.com/the-g20-invites-ineco-to-participate-in-its-seminars/ Wed, 27 Nov 2019 13:18:19 +0000 https://www.revistaitransporte.com/?p=3837

The Global Infrastructure Hub (GIH), an organisation dedicated to the development of infrastructure within the G20 group, has invited Ineco to participate in one of its seminars to be held in Riyadh, Saudi Arabia, a country that will hold the presidency in 2020. The meeting is part of the activities of the Infrastructure Working Group (IWG) of the G20, whose objectives include the strengthening of public-private relations to carry out investments.

The IWG analyses different approaches, policies and joint actions for the G20 to increase infrastructure investment. Recently, the Global Infrastructure Hub visited the company’s offices to find out about Cityneco and its solutions applied to mobility, the collection of real-time traffic data and the management of parking reservations. A comprehensive solution, developed by Ineco, based on different vertical developments for each of the management areas of a city or organisation.

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3rd Innova Awards https://www.revistaitransporte.com/3rd-innova-awards/ https://www.revistaitransporte.com/3rd-innova-awards/#respond Mon, 12 Feb 2018 19:48:01 +0000 http://www.revistaitransporte.com/?p=3072

Ineco has completed the third edition of its Innova Awards presented to the company’s professionals. The three award-winning projects were SIMA, by María del Mar Jiménez, Alberto Antón, Héctor Damaso, Iván Hernández, Óscar Rocha, Daniel Zabala and Marta Ruano; the ERTMS railway capacity impact assessment method, by Silvia Domínguez, Laura, Alfonso Lorenzo and Daniel Berzal; and the Cityneco Smart City Platform, by Jesús Vázquez, Daniel Esteban, Francisco Javier Carvajal, Ana Olmeda and Rafael Ibáñez.

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Cityneco: the smart city https://www.revistaitransporte.com/cityneco-the-smart-city/ https://www.revistaitransporte.com/cityneco-the-smart-city/#respond Thu, 15 Jun 2017 14:00:49 +0000 http://www.revistaitransporte.com/?p=2645

The future is here. Technologies that were unthinkable a few decades ago now make it possible to travel long distances faster, more safely, and with less consumption. We can manage and centralize all of the transport and services of a large city or region, prevent or resolve traffic congestion before it occurs and control communications remotely. We’ve come a long way, but paradoxically, we’re still far from where we want to go. But nothing can be achieved without a society with the capacity for change, commitment and transformation. Nothing without innovation.

Sustainability and innovative technology go hand in hand in modern engineering and are the keys to building a friendlier society. This issue’s cover story addresses one of the very latest topical issues that largely represents this demand for progress: the application of information and communication technologies in cities, where more than half of the world’s population is already concentrated. Ineco is responding to this challenge decisively through its commitment to ICTs applied to mobility, smart platforms that make it possible to manage integrated data in real time. An example of this process of digital transformation is Cityneco, the platform that will soon go into operation to help provide truly smart management of traffic in the city of Granada.

The future is here, but nothing can be achieved without a society with the capacity for change, commitment and transformation. Nothing without innovation

In the report on air transport in Peru, we cover the vision of the general manager of AdP, concessionaire of the Chiclayo International Airport, a project to which we are contributing our extensive experience in airport expansion. For years, we have also provided technology to serve citizens through cutting-edge projects like the Galileo satellite navigation system, in which we have participated since 2010 and which is covered once again in this issue.

Lastly, we have technology and sustainability in Renfe’s Universal Accessibility Plan, on which we are collaborating to improve the Cercanías commuter rail stations; the Faros de España project, for which we also have the interview with the head of the Spanish Marine Aids to Navigation Service of Puertos del Estado and reports on ENAIRE’s Flight Plan 2020, and environmental management. We hope our readers will find the contents of this issue interesting and informative.

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The new vision of the smart city https://www.revistaitransporte.com/the-new-vision-of-the-smart-city/ https://www.revistaitransporte.com/the-new-vision-of-the-smart-city/#respond Thu, 15 Jun 2017 12:36:35 +0000 http://www.revistaitransporte.com/?p=2634

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.

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, Open data – Y.ODI, Tourist Destinations – Y.STD and Development of Rural Environments – Y.SRC), 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.

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.

Spain is a pioneer and an international point of reference in the development of smart cities thanks to its National Smart Cities’ Plan

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.

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’. 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.

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.

Local intelligence serving global mobility

Our cities are beginning to develop true intelligence. Cities such as Santander, Málaga, 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.

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.

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.

INECO EN LA FERIA SMART CITY EXPO WORLD CONGRESS. El equipo de TI de Ineco en la Smart City Expo World Congress/16 de Barcelona. De izqda. a dcha.: Fco. Javier Carvajal, Eloy Cámara, Ignacio Martínez, subdirector de TI, y Jesús Vázquez, junto a ellos, Ana Olmeda y Natalia Díaz, gerente de Gestión del Conocimiento.

INECO AT THE SMART CITY EXPO WORLD CONGRESS. Ineco’s IT team at the Smart City Expo World Congress/16 in Barcelona. From left to right: Francisco Javier Carvajal, Eloy Cámara, Ignacio Martínez, deputy director of IT, and Jesús Vázquez, alongside them, Ana Olmeda and Natalia Díaz, Knowledge Management manager.

Smart Buildings

Buildings are the main elements of the city and as such, they represent one of the greatest assets of smart cities. In addition to the increasing automation of the internal operation of buildings, work is also being done with the aim of turning them into some of the most important sensors in the city. Buildings have a lot of valuable information that can contribute to both the city and other buildings in terms of energy consumption, as well as alarms in the field of security, environment or sustainability.

Spain is committed to this comprehensive vision and already has a UNE standard for smart buildings. Also, work is being carried out with the industry to define a device to allow all the relevant information to be collected and transmitted to the city in a comprehensive manner.

Smart stations and airports

Analysing smart stations in a similar manner to buildings, we find that they must manage their facilities properly in regard to maintenance and security, as well as in regard to their commercial aspects, exploiting the characteristics of digital marketing and providing travellers with a user experience that makes them feel unique. But communication between the station and the city is essential in order to exchange the information that they both need.

Stations, like ports and airports, constitute a point of entry and, in that sense, are the traveller’s first point of contact with the city. For this reason, they must provide relevant information about the city, so that it can optimize its resources and services in different areas: public transport, mobility, security or tourism.

Cityneco predicts future traffic conditions facilitating optimization of mobility parameters virtually in real time

The use of information by the city, which is aggregated in order to avoid privacy issues, such as the number of travellers expected within a certain time range, can be made available to private agents through a city’s Open Data portals, allowing the development of new business models that improve the range services offered to users, for example, in the tourism sector.

Smart ports

In the case of the analysis of the ports, and to provide a more comprehensive view, we will focus our comments on the area of freight transport. In addition to being the point of arrival of travellers, ports constitute a point of entry of goods to the city. The predicted information regarding the arrival of these goods, as well as their characteristics, is of great value, allowing the city to adapt, taking into account logistical and security aspects based on the volume and types of goods.

The importance of interoperability

All the objectives discussed so far for the elements of cities would be impossible without city platforms. It is in these platforms where the magic of transforming information into knowledge takes place. They allow information to be exchanged between the different services of a city and this combination generates significant added value.

We understand interoperability in different ways. First, cities must be able to evolve and change their platforms over time, if they want to, without affecting the other elements involved. Furthermore, this change may be a comprehensive change of the entire platform or may affect only one part of it.

The second concept of interoperability is centred on the fact that different platforms must be able to communicate with each other; station and airport platforms will need to talk to the city, and the platforms in different cities will in turn also need to talk to each other to exchange information.

Una representación de una ciudad inteligente hecha con Lego, que gestiona la información mediante el uso intensivo de las TICs. / FOTO_ELVIRA VILA

A Lego representation of a smart city, which manages information through the intensive use of ICTs. / PHOTO_ELVIRA VILA

The third concept of interoperability focuses on the business models that will be built on the city’s platforms. Private agents are developing new business models, such as smart parking applications or tourist destinations, and there must be some assurance that the investment made to develop a product for a city will be recovered, with the possibility of implementing the same product in other cities.

To demonstrate the high degree of interoperability of Spanish platforms, SESIAD and Ineco are working on the implementation of virtual laboratories that allow the functional validation of the different solutions developed for smart cities. These laboratories, in turn, make it possible to verify the portability of solutions between different platforms. Smart city platforms have currently been implemented in cities such as Málaga, Valencia or Barcelona, but they are not the only ones that have already taken the step.

UNA PLATAFORMA NOVEDOSA. Además de la información de los sensores, la plataforma Cityneco analiza la información proveniente de datos de telefonía móvil, GPS e incluso redes sociales, lo que enriquece la información de estado de la movilidad en la ciudad.

A NEW PLATFORM. In addition to the information from the sensors, the Cityneco platform analyses information from mobile data, GPS and even social networks, which enriches the information on the mobility status in the city.

For these reasons, Spain is a pioneer in the interoperability of smart city platforms. There is a UNE interoperability standard (UNE 178104) that has been proposed as an international standard through the ITU (International Telecommunication Union). Ineco has collaborated since the early stages as a member of the subcommittee that developed the standard, through to its international deployment, providing technical support to SESIAD. Cityneco complies with this standard, so it is completely interoperable.

Regarding all of the above, we can say that the interoperability of these platforms is vital to the development of both Spanish cities and Spanish industry. It is important to remember that our platforms can be exported to other countries.

The National Platform

One thing to keep in mind is that the development of smart cities can lead to increased inequalities among cities, and one of the fundamental factors arising from this is the attraction and capturing of talent. The cities that are undergoing the greatest development in the field of smart cities are generating a pull effect on this talent, which in turn is driving innovation and development of the city itself.

The development of a national platform would allow municipalities with more limited economic capacity to enjoy the benefits of smart cities

Also, cities with more limited resources have less investment capacity and that means that they cannot access solutions that like the city platform that represent the cornerstone of innovation.

In these cases, it may make sense to develop a national platform that allows municipalities with more limited economic capacity to enjoy the benefits of smart city solutions without having to make an investment that, in most cases, is beyond their reach. This national platform would serve these municipalities, allowing savings in acquisition and maintenance costs to each municipality, allowing them to focus their investment on specific vertical solutions to improve the services they provide to their citizens.

Cityneco, a smart platform

Ineco ha firmado un acuerdo de colaboración con la ciudad de Granada para implantar la plataforma Cityneco.

Ineco has signed a collaboration agreement with the city of Granada to implement the Cityneco platform. / PHOTO_BÁRBARA JIMÉNEZ-ALFARO

Cityneco is the smart platform developed by Ineco to integrate the different verticals in cities.

The platform makes it possible to connect the city’s different sensors thanks to its IoT (Internet of Things) module, and in turn it can also integrate and process multiple sources of information, from social networks to video images.

  • The platform is fully scalable and interoperable thanks to its layered structure, fully compliant with the standardization proposal in the standard. There is also a version that is offered in the form of Software as a Service (SaaS) that allows the development of medium-sized cities, making use of the platform without requiring the city to have its own infrastructure.
  • With respect to the use of information, the platform can display dashboards based on real-time information as well as management indicators.
  • Within the mobility vertical, Ineco’s solution presents highly innovative features that set it apart from the other solutions available on the market. The platform monitors traffic thanks to the information that it receives from the non-conventional traffic detectors and sensors. The platform then processes the information, taking advantage of the integration with the simulation models, as well as the use of machine learning techniques (artificial intelligence). This makes it possible to predict future traffic conditions, facilitating optimization of mobility parameters virtually in real time. On the other hand, together with the information from the sensors, the platform’s features allow information from mobile data, GPS and even social networks to be analysed, enriching the information on the status of mobility in the city.
  • Ineco has signed a collaboration agreement with the city of Granada and is in the process of implementing the Cityneco platform, in order to allow the city to test the capabilities of the Ineco smart platform as well as the mobility vertical.

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Fairs and conferences https://www.revistaitransporte.com/fairs-and-conferences/ https://www.revistaitransporte.com/fairs-and-conferences/#respond Thu, 09 Feb 2017 18:39:08 +0000 http://www.revistaitransporte.com/?p=2440

Ineco has participated in the United Nations Conference on Housing and Sustainable Urban Development, Habitat III, which took place in Quito (Ecuador) from 17-20 October 2016. This event, which is held every 20 years, brings together the greatest authorities from almost 135 countries to lay the foundations for the urban development agenda. Among the event’s activities, the former subsecretary of the Spanish Ministry of Public Works, Mario Garcés, and the president, Jesús Silva, participated in a conference entitled Crises as an Opportunity to rethink urban and housing policies, in which Silva underlined the importance of planning and mobility as pillars of sustainable urban development.

The company also participated in two presentations at BIMEXPO, which was held in Madrid last October. The aim of the event is to evaluate the solutions, services and knowledge industry for the professionals involved in the use of BIM (Building Information Modelling) in the design, planning, construction and maintenance process. Ineco is the coordinator of es.BIM, a commission established by the Spanish Ministry of Public Works for the implementation of BMI methodology in Spain.

Ineco was also present as a co-exhibitor at the Microsoft pavilion in the Smart City Expo World Congress, held in Barcelona last November. At the exhibition, Ineco presented the new CityNECO platform and its solutions for mobility, real-time traffic data collection and car-park reserve management.

Ineco also took part in the 2nd International Conference, organised annually by the PPP for Cities forum and held in parallel with the Smart City Expo.

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City lights (and shadows) https://www.revistaitransporte.com/city-lights-and-shadows/ https://www.revistaitransporte.com/city-lights-and-shadows/#respond Wed, 08 Feb 2017 09:21:32 +0000 http://www.revistaitransporte.com/?p=2360

The world is increasingly urbanised, and in just a few decades it will be even more so. Cities only make up a tenth of the world’s land, yet today more than 55% of the total population (7,800 million people) live in them. By 2050 this percentage will have reached 70% of the world’s population, estimated at 10,000 million. These are the figures handled by UN-Habitat, the United Nations programme devoted to housing and sustainable urban development, i.e. to ensuring that human settlements are adequate and decent for people and that they respect the environment.

The process of urbanisation –with all its social, economic and environmental repercussions– is happening on a global scale, at an increasingly fast pace and spontaneously, giving rise to urban settlements that lack the minimum infrastructure and services to ensure the quality of life and development of their inhabitants. Adequate planning of both urban growth and transport networks –especially in large metropolitan areas– is one of the keys to making cities into habitable environments that are sustainable, safe, fair and friendly for their inhabitants.

We cannot talk of city planning from one sole point of view or one sole model: we have to consider what makes each urban area unique in order to offer effective solutions that respond to specific problems.

For this, we require political will, commitment from all actors (state, private and civilian), as well as availability of economic and financial resources, which will enable policies and actions to be agreed to achieve a sustainable development model.

In the current context of rapid urbanisation, planning has new challenges to confront, such as slowing down climate change, backing sustainability and fighting against growing social inequality. For this, it is necessary to ensure universal access to basic services such as transport, water, sanitation, energy, communications and equipment.

A highly organised urban model with sufficient equipment and public spaces, affordable housing and sustainable mobility offers people more opportunities of employment and training as well as access to essential services like healthcare and education, among others, thus minimising urban imbalances and inequality.

The United Nations Conference on Housing and Sustainable Urban Development, Habitat III, held in Quito, Ecuador, from 17–20 October 2016, brought together over 35,000 participants and covered all these topics through numerous conferences and events in which the various agents debated and presented their proposals to tackle the urban problems of the future. Among its main conclusions were the pursuit of social inclusion and eradication of poverty, sustainable and inclusive urban prosperity, and the assurance of a sustainable, resilient environmental balance through city planning.

The result of this meeting, translated into the so-called New Urban Agenda, gathered and took on the conclusions and commitments made by the international community in another two global forums of colossal importance for the planet’s development: the historic Paris Agreement on Climate (COP21) in December 2015, in which 195 countries signed the first binding global agreement to reduce global warming and slow down climate change, and the 17 goals of the UN’s Sustainable Development Agenda 2030.

In the first row, the Ecuadorian Minister for Urban Development and Housing, Ms Ángeles Duarte, the then Secretary General of the United Nations, Mr Ban Ki-moon, and the Executive Director of UN-Habitat, former Barcelona mayor Mr Joan Clos.

In the first row, the Ecuadorian Minister for Urban Development and Housing, Ms Ángeles Duarte, the then Secretary General of the United Nations, Mr Ban Ki-moon, and the Executive Director of UN-Habitat, former Barcelona mayor Mr Joan Clos.

Mobility for urban development: Ineco’s experience

Ineco, as part of the Spanish government’s delegation, took part in this global conference, presenting its planning, consultancy and transport engineering experience, a field in which we have decades of experience, as well as in other, more recently developed sectors linked to sustainable development, such as management of water resources and waste or smart cities.

The company has taken on an extensive range of engineering and consultancy work in these fields, to which it takes a comprehensive approach, marrying the interests of public administrations, businesses and society, and always including the environmental and social aspect to products through environmental assessments and socialisation projects.

As such, Ineco has successfully completed projects of all kinds in relation to urban and interurban mobility: from technical, economic, financial, legal and environmental impact feasibility studies (such as those performed on the Bi-oceanic Corridor for the governments of Bolivia and Peru) to drawing up projects and supervising infrastructure construction (conventional and high-speed railway lines and stations in Spain, Arabia, Turkey, India, etc.), airports, highways, access to ports and logistics centres, etc.

Among the studies carried out by Ineco to improve bus transport have been the reordering of buses in Algiers, the Bus Transport Strategic Plan in Oman, and the sustainable technology study for the buses of São Paulo. In metro systems, we have extensive experience in Spain (Madrid, Barcelona, Valencia, Seville, etc.) and in Medellín, São Paulo and Santiago de Chile. In terms of trams and light metros, also in Spain, we have worked on studies and projects in Madrid, Bilbao, Logroño, Zaragoza, León, Tenerife and Alicante, and on new schemes in Belgrade and Kuwait, as well as studies for tram renovation in Tallinn, in Latvia and in Pavlodar in Kazakhstan. Our suburban railway work includes the comprehensive projects between Caracas and the Valles del Tui in Venezuela, the studies for building a railway system in San José, Costa Rica, the Belgrade Light Metro and the Buenavista-Cuautitlán line in Mexico.

Comprehensive strategic, multimodal planning on a national, regional or local scale is another of the company’s specialities; for over four decades we have cooperated with the Spanish government to develop their national plans –PITVI (the Infrastructure, Transport and Housing Plan) is the most recent– but also with other governments such as those of Ecuador, Costa Rica, Oman and Algeria. Croatia and Malta, which are also planning their national strategies, commissioned a vital part of their plans to Ineco: that of preparing their national transport models (see pages 34-37) which, in Malta’s case, enabled Ineco to take part in the development of the National Transport Strategy, the National Master Plan, and finally the Strategic Environmental Assessment.

On a local level, it is worth mentioning the drawing up of Urban Mobility Plans, management tools to structure mobility policies towards methods for more sustainable movement in municipalities such as Hospitalet de Llobregat (151,000 inhabitants), Logroño (228,000) and A Coruña (244,000), where in addition to optimising public transport we also seek to strengthen non-motorised modes of transport, such as travel by foot or by bicycle.

For example, in Muscat, the capital of Oman, the starting point was one in which there was considerable presence of private vehicles and absence of railway networks, and it was concluded that a new, well-run network of buses would be the basis for the future public transport network. Ineco designed and presented a plan for the city in 2015 (starting with route proposals towards a new management model based on a single transport authority, among many other aspects) and subsequently the Bus Transport Strategic Plan for national public transport operations. The Omani government acquired a modern, state-of-the-art vehicle fleet to equip new urban and long-distance routes, and has put in place, among other means, a new legislative framework which is transforming the public transport system in the Sultanate (see IT57).

Towards the future of the city

Ineco has expanded its activity to planning other public services like water and waste:  as such, it prepared the Master Plan for Comprehensive Waste Management in the Metropolitan District of Quito (see IT58), based on a circular economy strategy with direct application methods and an effective legal framework; and studies for supervising the National Irrigation Plan in Ecuador with the aim of optimising water resource management, and it is elaborating Panama’s National Plan for the Collection and Treatment of Solid Waste, which will set out the means necessary to solve national waste management problems.

For Smart Cities the use of technology enables dynamic, real-time information to be obtained by installing sensors (the “internet of things”) and the vast quantity of data gathered via Big Data platforms to be processed. The Smart City model enables the management of multiple services to be optimised, from waste collection to traffic management, with the resulting benefit to the environment of reducing emissions, energy consumption and water, among other resources. It also enables citizen participation and administrative transparency to be increased. In this field, Ineco is working on the development of its platform CityNECO, with a pilot project for Granada City Council.

In short, the company, which presented some of its projects at Habitat (see News in this issue), believes in and works towards an urban model planned with an agreed comprehensive approach that is economically, socially and environmentally sustainable, with cleaner air, more space for pedestrians, greater abundance of water and biodiversity, and greater involvement of citizens, at the heart of a more polycentric, fluid urban structure in which information is available to assist people’s development and wellbeing.

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