Post by shapanfgfdgoo on Mar 16, 2024 3:37:18 GMT -5
The with good intentions but the fate of the project is an example of how smart cities fail. Quayside Toronto Canada In Sidewalk Labs announced plans to create a hightech neighborhood in Toronto called Quayside. It was planned to be built on Torontos waterfront and dedicated to environmental sustainability accessibility mobility and economic opportunity. The promises were quite loud dedicated lanes for driverless vehicles infrastructure for environmentally friendly vehicles realtime parking information affordable housing antipollution technologies. Local data collection technology will help urban planning and development processes. The problem is that Sidewalk Labs was owned by Alphabet Googles parent company.
Local activists have raised concerns about who owns the collected data whether it will be sold to third parties and what this will mean for their privacy. In May the project was canceled. Sidewalk Labs CEO Daniel L. Doctoroff commented With unprecedented Mobile Numbers economic uncertainty around the world and in Torontos real estate market it has become extremely difficult to make the acre . ha project financially viable without sacrificing key parts of our plan. Artificially created smart cities are not a new concept. Even Bill Gates invested million in buying . hectares of land for the project on the outskirts of Buckeye Arizona.
However there has been little news of progress since the land was acquired and the to have been hacked. But there are several more successful examples. Songdo South Korea The South Korean city of Songdo is home to a billion project the Songdo International Business District a purposebuilt smart city launched in . Its area is square meters. km of it consists of green spaces and contains apartments. Sensors monitor the energy consumption of buildings. A central pneumatic waste disposal system eliminates the need for waste collection. In Songdo there are many charging stations for cars and the total length of bicycle paths is km. Unfortunately the city has not yet been completed.
Local activists have raised concerns about who owns the collected data whether it will be sold to third parties and what this will mean for their privacy. In May the project was canceled. Sidewalk Labs CEO Daniel L. Doctoroff commented With unprecedented Mobile Numbers economic uncertainty around the world and in Torontos real estate market it has become extremely difficult to make the acre . ha project financially viable without sacrificing key parts of our plan. Artificially created smart cities are not a new concept. Even Bill Gates invested million in buying . hectares of land for the project on the outskirts of Buckeye Arizona.
However there has been little news of progress since the land was acquired and the to have been hacked. But there are several more successful examples. Songdo South Korea The South Korean city of Songdo is home to a billion project the Songdo International Business District a purposebuilt smart city launched in . Its area is square meters. km of it consists of green spaces and contains apartments. Sensors monitor the energy consumption of buildings. A central pneumatic waste disposal system eliminates the need for waste collection. In Songdo there are many charging stations for cars and the total length of bicycle paths is km. Unfortunately the city has not yet been completed.