What Is a Smart City?
Listen to Three Experts Debate
Architect Paul Doherty, policy and sustainability expert Debra Lam, and author Anthony Townsend exchange opinions and insights on why companies across all sectors want a stake.
By WANDA LAU
Season four of ARCHITECT’s podcast. Listen to more episodes here.
These days, companies in every sector from lighting and software to energy and automobiles seem to tout expertise in smart cities. Major cities and even states are vying to become the smartest of them all. But what is a smart city? Why are companies across industries jumping into the fray? And how can architects contribute their experience and expertise?
In this podcast episode, ARCHITECT speaks with three experts with firsthand knowledge, insights, and opinions about the lure of smart cities: Paul Doherty, an architect and the chairman and CEO of the international company The Digit Group (TDG); Debra Lam, managing director of the Smart Cities and Inclusive Innovation initiative at Georgia Tech, founder of the Georgia Smart Communities Challenge, and the former chief of innovation and performance for the city of Pittsburgh; and Anthony Townsend, founder of New York–based Bits and Atoms and author of Smart Cities: Big Data, Civic Hackers and the Quest for a New Utopia (W.W. Norton & Co., 2013).
Excerpts from this roundtable, including several questions not included in this episode due to time, appeared in text form in the January 2019 issue of ARCHITECT under the headline “What Is a Smart City? We’re Working On It.”
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