Colleagues Katharine Willis and Alessandro Aurigi have just published the edited volume “The Routledge Companion to Smart Cities“. In this compendium, Martijn de Waal, Matthijs Bouw and me co-wrote a chapter about our experiences in The Hackable City project.
Here’s the TOC, which looks like a great set of chapters:
Table of Contents
1. Introduction
Alessandro Aurigi and Katharine S. Willis
Part 1: Smart City Governance
Section 1: Urban governance, data and participatory infrastructure
2. A City is Not Computer (with Editorial Introduction)
Shannon Mattern
3. Bias in Urban Research: From Tools to Environments
Mark Shepard
4. Urban Science: Prospect and Critique
Rob Kitchin
5. Defining Smart Cities: High and Low Frequency Cities, Big Data and Urban Theory
Michael Batty
6. Digital information and the right to the city
Joe Shaw and Mark Graham
7. Shaping participatory public data infrastructure in the smart city: open data standards and the turn to transparency
Tim Davies
Section 2: Governing, inclusion and smart citizens
8. Towards an agenda of place, local agency-based and inclusive smart urbanism
Nancy Odendaal, Alessandro Aurigi
9. Governmentality and urban control
Rob Kitchin, Claudio Coletta and Gavin McArdle
10. How smart is Smart City Lagos?
Taibat Lawanson and Olamide Udoma-Ejorh
11. Smart Citizens in Amsterdam: An Alternative to the Smart City
Judith Veenkamp, Frank Kresin and Max Kortlander
12. Governing Technology-based Urbanism: Technocratic Governance or Progressive Planning?
Chiara Garau, Giulia Desogus and Paola Zamperlin
Part 2: Smart City Development
Section 1: Creative, smart or sustainable?
13. Will the real smart city please stand up? Intelligent, progressive or entrepreneurial (with Editorial Introduction)
Robert G. Hollands
14. Smart to green: smart eco-cities in the green economy
Frederico Caprotti
15. Towards ethical legibility: an inclusive view of waste technologies
Dietmar Offenhuber
16. Stand Up Please, the Real Sustainable Smart City?
C. William R. Webster and Charles Leleux
Section 2: Citizen Science and Co-production
17. Sharing in smart cities: what are we missing out on?
Christopher T. Boyko, Serena Pollastri, Claire Coulton, Nick Dunn and Rachel Cooper
18. Taxonomy of Environmental Sensing in Smart Cities
Christian Nold
19. Co-creating Sociable Smart City Futures
Ingrid Mulder and Justien Marseille
Part 3: Smart City Visions
Section 1: Urban planning, city models and smart storytelling
20. Smart cities as corporate storytelling (with Editorial Introduction)
Ola Söderström, Till Paasche and Francisco Klauser
21. Will the real smart city please make itself visible?
Edward Wigley and Gillian Rose
22. From Hybrid Spaces to “Imagination Cities”: A Speculative Approach to Virtual Reality
Johanna Ylipulli, Matti Pouke, Aale Luusua and Timo Ojala
23. The Museum in the Smart City: The Role of Cultural Institutions in Co-creating Urban Imaginaries
Carlos Estrada-Grajales, Marcus Foth, Peta Mitchell and Glenda Amayo Caldwell
Section 2: Cities and placemaking
24. The hackable city: exploring collaborative citymaking in a network society
Martijn de Waal, Michiel de Lange and Matthijs Bouw
25. Designing the city as a place or a product? How space is marginalised in the smart city
Alessandro Aurigi
26. Self-Monitoring, Analysis and Reporting Technologies: Smart Cities and Real-time Data
Andrew Hudson-Smith, Stephan Hügel and Flora Roumpani
27. Reimagining urban infrastructure through design and experimentation: autonomous boat technology in the canals of Amsterdam
Fábio Duarte, Lenna Johnsen and Carlo Ratti
28. The Death and Life of Smart Cities
Katharine S. Willis
Reference:
de Waal, Martijn , Michiel de Lange, and Matthijs Bouw. 2020. "The hackable city: exploring collaborative citymaking in a network society." In The Routledge Companion to Smart Cities, edited by Katharine S. Willis and Alessandro Aurigi, 351-366. New York: Routledge. https://doi.org/10.4324/9781315178387.