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dc.contributor.authorAurigi, A
dc.date.accessioned2024-02-09T12:32:57Z
dc.date.available2024-02-09T12:32:57Z
dc.date.issued2024-03-01
dc.identifier.issn0263-7960
dc.identifier.urihttps://pearl.plymouth.ac.uk/handle/10026.1/22043
dc.description.abstract

For decades, accounts and speculations on the emergence of digitally-augmented environments have suggested utopian, and dystopian, visions of increased spatial fluidities – doing anything from anywhere – in which the role of specific places could become redundant. The emergence of smart urbanism, through technocratic visions of central, algorithmic control, could materialize such centrifugal detachment from place and local context, as it operates a shift of agency from space and community to code. Are, therefore, the hyper-local scale, and neighbourhoods, relevant entities in our increasingly digital urban environments? This paper makes a case for the smart neighbourhood not as a plain, pre-determined, functional sub-unit of a centrally controlled and automated smart metropolis, but as a radically divergent – yet necessarily complementary – dimension of it. The discussion looks at the scales of the locale – and of the hyper-local – as the enablers of a re-combined and re-energized spatial and digital agency. It discusses the importance of local appropriation and contextualization of technology – as opposed to the 'off-the-shelf' adoption of civic infrastructural systems and management software, and of enabling significant social innovation and community involvement and participation. However, once the importance of re-combining space, community and technology at the local scale has been explored, the paper discusses how the point is not opposing the smart neighbourhood to the smart city through a simplistic bottom-up vs top-down dualist vision, but rather reflecting on how these dimensions should work together. Design and development strategies that aim to conjugate the very bespoke and pilot with the scalable, and the qualitative with the quantitative, while enabling local innovation and experimentation, are needed to envisage a grounded, sustainable, and effective smart city.

dc.format.extent152-167
dc.languageen
dc.publisherAlexandrine Press
dc.subject33 Built Environment and Design
dc.subject3301 Architecture
dc.subject3302 Building
dc.subject3304 Urban and Regional Planning
dc.subject11 Sustainable Cities and Communities
dc.titleCan Neighbourhoods Save the Smart City?
dc.typejournal-article
dc.typeJournal Article
plymouth.issue1
plymouth.volume50
plymouth.publisher-urlhttp://dx.doi.org/10.2148/benv.50.1.152
plymouth.publication-statusPublished
plymouth.journalBuilt Environment
dc.identifier.doi10.2148/benv.50.1.152
plymouth.organisational-group|Plymouth
plymouth.organisational-group|Plymouth|Faculty of Arts, Humanities and Business
plymouth.organisational-group|Plymouth|Faculty of Arts, Humanities and Business|School of Art, Design and Architecture
plymouth.organisational-group|Plymouth|REF 2021 Researchers by UoA
plymouth.organisational-group|Plymouth|Users by role
plymouth.organisational-group|Plymouth|Users by role|Academics
plymouth.organisational-group|Plymouth|REF 2021 Researchers by UoA|UoA13 Architecture, Built Environment and Planning
plymouth.organisational-group|Plymouth|REF 2028 Researchers by UoA
plymouth.organisational-group|Plymouth|REF 2028 Researchers by UoA|UoA13 Architecture, Built Environment and Planning
dcterms.dateAccepted2024-01-18
dc.date.updated2024-02-09T12:32:57Z
dc.rights.embargodate2024-4-20
dc.rights.embargoperiod
rioxxterms.versionofrecord10.2148/benv.50.1.152


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