Density, Energy and Metabolism of a proposed smart city

This paper reports on a detailed analysis of the metabolism of the Island City of Mumbai should the Indian Government’s proposal for ‘smart’ cities be implemented. It focuses on the environmental impact of increased population density achieved by demolishing existing medium-rise (3-5 storey) housin...

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Main Authors: Anindita Mandal, Hugh Byrd
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Alanya Hamdullah Emin Paşa Üniversitesi 2017-12-01
Series:Journal of Contemporary Urban Affairs
Subjects:
Online Access:https://ijcua.com/index.php/ijcua/article/view/16
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spelling doaj-4631388c9e0e474581981a4a80938be22021-04-02T18:38:04ZengAlanya Hamdullah Emin Paşa ÜniversitesiJournal of Contemporary Urban Affairs2475-61642475-61562017-12-011210.25034/ijcua.2017.3648Density, Energy and Metabolism of a proposed smart cityAnindita Mandal0Hugh Byrd1Lulea Tekniska Universitet, SwedenSchool of Architecture & Design, University of Lincoln, UK This paper reports on a detailed analysis of the metabolism of the Island City of Mumbai should the Indian Government’s proposal for ‘smart’ cities be implemented. It focuses on the environmental impact of increased population density achieved by demolishing existing medium-rise (3-5 storey) housing and replacing it with the proposed high-rise (40-60 storey) towers. The resulting increase in density places a burden on the demand on such things as electricity and water and simultaneously increases the output flows of drainage, solid waste and greenhouse gas production. An extended urban metabolism analysis is carried out on a proposed development in Mumbai (Bhendi Bazaar) that has been put forward as an exemplar case study by the Government. The flows of energy, water and wastes are calculated based on precedents and from first principles. The results of the case study are then extrapolated across the City in order to identify the magnitude of increased demands and wastes should the ‘smart’ city proposals be fully realised. Mumbai is the densest city in the world. It already suffers from repeated blackouts, water rationing and inadequate waste and sewage treatment. The results of the study indicate, on a per capita basis, increasing density will have a significant further detrimental effect on the environment. https://ijcua.com/index.php/ijcua/article/view/16Smart citiesEnergyWasteBlackoutsDensityMumbai
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Anindita Mandal
Hugh Byrd
spellingShingle Anindita Mandal
Hugh Byrd
Density, Energy and Metabolism of a proposed smart city
Journal of Contemporary Urban Affairs
Smart cities
Energy
Waste
Blackouts
Density
Mumbai
author_facet Anindita Mandal
Hugh Byrd
author_sort Anindita Mandal
title Density, Energy and Metabolism of a proposed smart city
title_short Density, Energy and Metabolism of a proposed smart city
title_full Density, Energy and Metabolism of a proposed smart city
title_fullStr Density, Energy and Metabolism of a proposed smart city
title_full_unstemmed Density, Energy and Metabolism of a proposed smart city
title_sort density, energy and metabolism of a proposed smart city
publisher Alanya Hamdullah Emin Paşa Üniversitesi
series Journal of Contemporary Urban Affairs
issn 2475-6164
2475-6156
publishDate 2017-12-01
description This paper reports on a detailed analysis of the metabolism of the Island City of Mumbai should the Indian Government’s proposal for ‘smart’ cities be implemented. It focuses on the environmental impact of increased population density achieved by demolishing existing medium-rise (3-5 storey) housing and replacing it with the proposed high-rise (40-60 storey) towers. The resulting increase in density places a burden on the demand on such things as electricity and water and simultaneously increases the output flows of drainage, solid waste and greenhouse gas production. An extended urban metabolism analysis is carried out on a proposed development in Mumbai (Bhendi Bazaar) that has been put forward as an exemplar case study by the Government. The flows of energy, water and wastes are calculated based on precedents and from first principles. The results of the case study are then extrapolated across the City in order to identify the magnitude of increased demands and wastes should the ‘smart’ city proposals be fully realised. Mumbai is the densest city in the world. It already suffers from repeated blackouts, water rationing and inadequate waste and sewage treatment. The results of the study indicate, on a per capita basis, increasing density will have a significant further detrimental effect on the environment.
topic Smart cities
Energy
Waste
Blackouts
Density
Mumbai
url https://ijcua.com/index.php/ijcua/article/view/16
work_keys_str_mv AT aninditamandal densityenergyandmetabolismofaproposedsmartcity
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