Smart Urbanism: Utopian Vision or False Dawn?: Data, an urban resource – Halpren, LeCavalier, Calvillo, Pietsch

The smart grid concept is all about efficiency in consumptions and costs behind it as well as few other factors like reliability, security.With new setup of grid city can achieve the great result but what about existing infrastructure? Huge infrastructure existing in metro cities are working 24×7. What policies, as well as physical changes, can make it more efficient? At what extent current grids can result better?
Tabula Rasa: New Songdo.

What will be the validation mechanism for those trends? What are some of the visualized consequences? What will be the cost, cities, and residents pay to try this technique in the desire of an outcome that promises to become involved public functions and city dynamics in a numerical representation of traits? What could be a few possible false correlations? What would be a mechanism to identify and filter those correlations? What might be the consequences of no longer being capable of becoming aware of those relationships and the way would it affect the decision-making

Tabula Rasa: New Songdo.

At the centre of Songdo’s marketing materials and technical discourse lies a fantasized transformation in the management of life – human and machine in terms of increased access to information and decreased consumption of resources. The developers, financiers and media boosters of this city argue for a speculative space ahead of its time that operates at the synaptic level of its inhabitants.

Q) How pleasant and acceptable would be this vision of management of life with high-end monitoring devices? Will it be efficient or suffocating? Where does all this monitored data go and how are the decisions made? What will be the effects of a totalizing sensory environment on the interactions of citizens and what kind of decisions will be deduced from that data?

For example, marketing videos showed the roll-out of tele-medicine applications, which required, as some engineers suggested, transforming the laws of South Korea to allow the construction of medical grade networks to allow genetic and other data to flow from labs in the home to medical sites in the proliferation of house health-care services.

Q) What could be the implications and how would it alter the decisions that could possibly use this information? Who would be responsible for the protection of this data from being hacked and misused? How transparent will the system be and would citizens know how this data flows and its effects on their interactions in routine activities?

The promise of such number-crunching is that we will learn previously unknown things about ourselves based on an idea that the collective behavior of a city can be compiled and analyzed by machines in order to reveal profound trends in our social behavior. However, this approach could also easily, and perhaps dangerously, produce a number of false correlations.

Q) What would be the validation mechanism for these trends? What are some of the visualized outcomes? What would be the cost, cities, and citizens pay to try this methodology in the desire of an outcome that promises fitting complex urban functions and city dynamics in a numerical representation of trends? What could be some possible false correlations? What would be a mechanism to identify and filter these correlations? What could be the implications of not being able to identify these correlations and how would it effect the decision-making.

W03 Tabula Rase / Test Bed (nida)

Smart cities – Townsend – Songdo

  1. If computers become architectural materials, would the disembodied (data) provided by computers and utilized by designers be considered architectural material as well?
  1. ‘a showroom model for what is expected to be the first of many assembly-line cities?’ – Lindsay

Are we moving towards an architecture that is economical, convenient: one where the parts to a whole assemble quickly? Just as buildings during the industrial revolution constructed assembly- line cities. Where does individuality and uniqueness of a city fall into place? Unique spaces that help to distinguish cities would then cease to exist. What happens to human experience?

 

  1. ‘Remodeling cities in the image of Multinational Corporation requires three new layers of technology (Arup) – Instrumentation, urban informatics, and urban information architecture.’

Human information and consciousness, should it not be considered as another layer of technology?

Shouldn’t multinational corporations consider humans/consumers as another layer of technology; Since Human Information and consciousness could be contained within a computer just as much as it can be contained in a biological entity. The extension or addition of using technology and by it embedded into our lives as ubiquitously and subconsciously it becomes a form of extension, amputation or replacement to or for the body. Then according to Mc Luhans view in, “The Medium is a Message”, technologies involving communication add to the post-human process of evolving humans, through technology being an extension of the body.

 

  1. Sociologist James Katz, ‘Machines that become us’, Merge with our devices. Is this debunked by Hayles, when she questions what it means to be post-human, ‘The defining characteristics [of being post-human] involve the construction of subjectivity, not the presence of non-biological components’. It is not the use of technology or the addition of a prosthesis that determines being post-human but subjectivity or the freedom of choice to control technology or one’s self, the ability to possess freedom. The ability to choose, decide and react has led a shift from self-organizing systems to emergent systems in responsive or mediated environments.

Smart Urbanism – Utopian Vision or False Dawn

Test bed as Urban Epistemology

  1. “These self-referential and self-generating properties make Songdo, perhaps unsurprisingly mimetic of the logics of the very financial systems that have conceived and sponsored this ‘product’.” Does this mean Songdo design and push towards sustainability is driven by financial systems? Does this city then too become a product of consumerism?
  2. ‘Omniscience and omnipresence viewers/users/consumers can exceed their human limitations. … but these interfaces work on us as much as for us. The bilateralism of the interface informs the users but also makes them informers – i.e. it works to optimize the viewers and the network in which they operate. Because their habits and maps create a map of future habits, supply and demand will eventually merge.’ By mapping, human behavior, how do these interfaces work for us? Is optimization geared more towards consumers or the producers?
  1. What does he mean when he says, ‘The loss of the ideal image of space is replaced with an ideal of the perfect methodology’?
  1. When does space become a Territory, ‘an area defined not merely by physical geography but by ratios’? What does he mean by ratios? (Quantifiable?)
  1. The idea of selling data to other cities, to create exportable cities how effective and successful, would this data be in relation to other cities culture, religion, economy etc?

Tabula Rase: New Sondo – Feng

Smart City

  • P21 “It would sense the layout of the modules and reassemble them overnight into a new pattern to provoke, delight, and otherwise stimulate the retreat goers.” In those words, there is a possibility or tendency for flexibility. Dose the flexibility good for a building or architecture for users.
  • P28 Why dose author said, “…Songdo became too big to fail.”?
  • The upgrade speed of “smart thing” is much faster then infrastructure. (For example the least iPhone already can not connect to the least MacBook without a usb a-c adapter.) How would people deal with them?

Test Bed as Urban Epistemology

  • At the 4th paragraph of Automated Infrastructures. “at the domestic level, it is assumed that every wall, every mirror and every surface can become an interface that offers users everything from on-demand data and weather reports to home medical monitoring.”   It’s very convenient if people could get data of information from anywhere at home, but would it become a problem about information overload at home for people?

Tabula Rasa

The $100 Billion Jackpot

On Townsend words, Smart Cities rely on three different aspect: the deploy of a heavily interconnected infrastructure of power and sensing at a urban scale; “urban infomatics” capable of analysing and visualizing data coming from the network of sensors; and “managment practices” which lead to the automation and adaptation of the city to any certain condition in real time.

In this context, City is portrayed more like the development of a product, than a living environment in which people are suposed to live. In this context, which is the role of companies deveolping such cities, in terms of common political aspects of the city as governance and privacy? If instead of citizens, people are portrayed as users, which are their rights to act accordingly to this new scenario?

Test bed as urban epistemology

As Smart Cities are heavily dependent on models of data analysis that create responses based on “habits” of their users/citizens, what should we learn from the present problems related to the bias in the design of intelligent algorythims that analyse the stream of data from Social Networks and the Internet? Shouldn´t we be worried of the privacy of such data, as in the present this is used as a commodity? are there going to be a way to opt out of bringing our data? or is there going to be any kind of politics in terms of the usage of such information?

 

W3.Tabula Rasa: New Songdo – Pinelopi

  • On Townsend, A. “$100 Billion Dollar Jackpot” in Smart Cities (19-56)
    In what seems to be the analog struggle of the smart city, its various digital flows and operations depend on legacy infrastructure (pp.40-45). Is the economic burden of updating them greater than actually laying out brand new infrastructure? What could the unexpected perks of the “ideas follow infrastructure” approach (pp.29) in Songdo be?
      
  • On Halpern, LeCavalier, Calvillo, Pietch. “Testbed as Urban Epistemology” in Smart Urbanism (145-167)
    The failure in the logical operations of u-cities like Songdo seems to lie in the fact that they combine empirical methodology and refusal of an ideal, initial research hypotheses or endpoints with inductive reason – as opposed to past utopias that apparently speculated in a deductive manner. Each of the above elements alone marks a rather welcomed deviation from the cartesian, deterministic and deductive norms of modernity. Yet, as a whole, it is dysfunctional and problematic. Which element is causing this “epistemology of infinity, non-normativity and speculation” to fail?
    In my opinion, it is inductive reasoning that undermines the whole. However, I wonder how it is possible for an urban model built on boolean operations, statistical analysis and other firm logical tools to operate inductively.

Tabula Rasa: New Songdo – Germania Garzon

Testbed as Urban Epistemology – Calvillo, Halpern, LeCavalier, Pietsch

“cisco’s strategic planners envision a totalising sensory environment in which human actions and reactions from eye movements to body movements can be traced, tracked, and responded to in the name of consumer satisfaction and work efficiency ”

– It seems like Songdo in a way plans to de-humanize people in their efforts to data-mine all human actions, do we already see this happening now in cities in America?

– What do they mean when they say ” in the name of… work efficiency”?

– How far does Songdo plan on influencing the behavior of human/city interaction?

– Are they re-defining the boundary of public/private?

 

The $100 Billion Jackpot – Townsend

– “Such green gadgetry seems irrelevant…” writes Tim Edelsten a conservationist in Korea, “when you realize that a vast natural paradise has been destroyed to create all this new office space.”

– Is Songdo headed in the wrong direction? Should we be focusing on how to make our current cities smarter and extending them, rather than building completely new smart/green cities from the ground up?

Tabula Rasa: New Songdo – Sandra

 

$100 Billion Dollar Jackpot – Townsend

 – In some ways, Songdo is a scaled up continuation of Price’s “Generator,” in the sense that the 60’s project was one of the first to conceptualize a built environment that “could learn, remember and develop an intelligent awareness of their needs.” (p. 22) On the other hand, Songdo has gone in a completely different direction. Generator was described as “a computerized leisure facility” while every description of Songdo that I have seen has failed to mention or consider the happiness of its inhabitants. It may be efficient, and it may be “smart,” but will it be enjoyable? “Intuitive, mobile, and effortless, high definition video keeps the cities residents in near-lifelike contact at a distance and on the go.” (p. 48) Near-lifelike contact is still not actual human contact, and it seems like Songdo is giving its citizens every excuse to stay in their apartments, away from real contact to other people.

– Though we don’t think about it, “cellular” and “mobile” are missing the mark when it comes to how we describe our untethered devices. Maybe the German term “Handy” is the most accurate current expression.

 

Test Bed as Urban Epistemology – Calvillo, Halpern, LeCavalier, Pietsch

  If Songdo is “the experimental prototype community of tomorrow,” why is it already being exported to other parts of the world? According to the authors, the city is still “both literally and conceptually incomplete.” Should they not wait at least a few years, evaluate, and then learn from their mistakes before transplanting a replica?

– Living in an environment built on data mining sounds like it could be incredibly helpful and efficient in some ways, but one can imagine it quickly becoming an episode of Black Mirror. What is the need for home genetic-testing kits and blood-work labs in every home?

Tabula Rasa: New Songdo – Jiaqi

Smart Cities – $100 Billion Dollar Jackpot

  • “ The infrastructure is being laid, but the ideas and software that will choreograph it will require years, if not decades, of research and development in test beds like Songdo.” From the book, to say Songdo is really a good start of smart cities, but in some cases to say Songdo is like a test bed, a test of smart cities. How about the next smart city? What kind of information could be extracted from Songdo to improve infrastructure construction for next smart city?(environment?)
  • “Yet while untethered networks are the weakest links in the plumbing smart cities, they are the most valuable.” When machines that become to us, are we become to machines?

Smart Urbanism – Test bed as urban epistemology

  • “These individuals can be anywhere in the world; the territory is plastic and it does not need to be occupied” How to understand “territory is plastic”? Does it mean a smart city could also be plastic?

Tabula Rasa: New Songdo — Yumeng Chen

Smart Cities: Big Data, Civic Hackers, and the Quest for a New Utopia

-So via reading the article, many mechanical devises or good design can take place of so called smart city, so that the city will use less energy and avoid of power cut, isn’t it?

-the urban plan group of building the smart city,  must be grouped of many people from different fields, is there a position that people who in this position will take care of the extra energy cost?

 

Smart Urbanism: Utopian Vision or False Dawn?

 

-In my country, we usually have a five-year plan or fifteen-year plan, since the smart city is a very new concept, do we have a long time plan instead of roughly adding devices into the city saying making the citizens convenience?