Post on 14-Apr-2017
Céline VanderborghtSmart City Manager BRICcvanderborght@cirb.brussels
The Brussels Regional
InformaticsCentre (BRIC)
300 people50 M euros
The BRIC
Public administration which organizes, promotes and spreads the use of Information
and Communication Technologies within the Brussels-Capital Region
Target audience
Regional and Local Authorities Schools, Hospitals, Citizens
Advantages
cutting-edge IT skills through IRISteam asbl
founding shareholder of IRISnet, the Brussel’s broadband telecommunications network.
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Someexistingservices
Improve connectivity for schools and public spaces
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• 166 connected secondary schools by 2019 (28 schoolsper year)
• Average cost of connectivity35.000 EUR per school
• The Region will give 1 million EUR par year
A large scale free public wireless network: 60 sites connected, 4.000 users everyday
IRISbox : one-stop shop
250 interactive forms 25.000 documents/year
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Fix My Street: local incident
management (roads)
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19 municipalities 15.000 incidents in 2014
UrbIS: geographical databases and interactive cartographic applications
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UrbIS data / UrbIS tools / UrbIS applications
Nova platform: processing environmental,
planning and land division permits
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Closed Circuit Television (CCTV) platform: 2.900 cameras integrated by 2018
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BrusselsSmartCity
Definition
Concept
Philosophy
« In Smart Cities, digital technologies translate intobetter public services for citizen, better use of resources and less impact on the environment »
Digital Agenda for Europe
Concept smart city 2008
• mobile > fixed
• Things > humans
• Rural > urban
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New ICT paradigm• Mobile applications • Social networks• Internet of things• Cloud computing• Big data
Sustainability triangle• Social empowerment
and governance• Environmental resources
and pollution• Economic growth and
efficiency
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A. Existing servicesB. ConsultationsC. European projects
Strategy
• web portal http://smartcity.brussels on line since 3 June 2015• Smart City Manager hired in september 2015• Approval of a strategy for Brussels Smart City early 2016
Strategy and proposalsfor 2016 - 2019
“To create a smart city where living andworking are much more pleasant thanksto the smart use of technology”
State Secretary for IT andDigital transition Bianca Debaets
Consultations
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3. Education (citizen, open data, teachers, uses within the wall of the school)4. Weaknesses of the private sector, innovation insufficientlyhighlighted, to re-inforce (start-ups, EU projects, universities).
5. Need of high quality information (transparency) in both ways(contribution, co-creation)
1. Citizen must be at the heart of every smart city strategy
2. Data related to privacy (to convince, educate, find a solution for the future of any exchange of personaldata)
Smart City Summit3 June 2015
Meeting with ICT companies
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1. Open data
2. The cloud
3. ICT training and education
4. Clusters and incubators
Smart City Wheel Boyd Cohen
www.smartcity.brussels
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Fix-My-ProprétéWifi arrêts de bus
Streaming conseil communaux
Application qualité de l’airOpen data
StationnnementEcoles
Changement d’adresseCaméra d’ambiance
Antennes intercommunales
WiFi événementiel
EuropeanProjects
European Cloud Marketplace for Intelligent Mobility (CIP)
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Platform to publish services available in the cloud. Mobile payment and parking assistance services
Proof of concept
Integration of BePark services (find and use private parking spots with access management tools) and MobileFor (SMS’s payement for on street parking purposes) http://m.ecim-cities.eu/
building an Internet of Things Open innovation ecosystem for connected smart objects (H2020)
Interconnection of platforms, use of combined set of data from different platforms and creation of application building blocks
3 proof of concepts (to be defined)
• Safety on the way to school (sensors: mobile and traffic counting)
• Smart mobility for emergency services (sensors: cameras and GPS)
• Measuring cyclists (sensors: bikes sensors, mobile, trafic lights)
Conclusions
… andthanksfor your
attention!