Creating a National Urban Research and Development Platform for Advancing Urban Experimentation

Transformative changes are required for a 21st century sustainable urban development transition involving multiple interconnected domains of energy, water, transport, waste, and housing. This will necessitate a step change in performance goals and tangible solutions. Regenerative urban development h...

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Main Authors: Peter Newton, Niki Frantzeskaki
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: MDPI AG 2021-01-01
Series:Sustainability
Subjects:
Online Access:https://www.mdpi.com/2071-1050/13/2/530
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spelling doaj-b3b9f889954544ae8ff1a78919ed485b2021-01-09T00:00:12ZengMDPI AGSustainability2071-10502021-01-011353053010.3390/su13020530Creating a National Urban Research and Development Platform for Advancing Urban ExperimentationPeter Newton0Niki Frantzeskaki1Centre for Urban Transitions, Swinburne University of Technology, Melbourne 3122, AustraliaCentre for Urban Transitions, Swinburne University of Technology, Melbourne 3122, AustraliaTransformative changes are required for a 21st century sustainable urban development transition involving multiple interconnected domains of energy, water, transport, waste, and housing. This will necessitate a step change in performance goals and tangible solutions. Regenerative urban development has emerged as a major pathway, together with decarbonisation, climate adaptation involving new blue-green infrastructures, and transition to a new green, circular economy. These grand challenges are all unlikely to be realised with current urban planning and governance systems within a time frame that can mitigate environmental, economic, and social disruption. A new national platform for urban innovation has been envisaged and implemented in Australia that is capable of enabling engagement of multiple stakeholders across government, industry, and community as well as real time synchronous collaboration, visioning, research synthesis, experimentation, and decision-making. It targets large strategic metropolitan, mission-scale transition challenges as well as more tactical neighbourhood-scale projects. This paper introduces the <i>iHUB</i>: National Urban Research and Development Platform, its underlying concepts, and multiple layers of technical (IT/AV), software/analytical, data, and engagement, as envisioned and implemented in Australia’s four largest capital cities and five collaborating foundation universities.https://www.mdpi.com/2071-1050/13/2/530innovationexperimentationcitiesurban transformationsustainability transitionurban collaboratory
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Peter Newton
Niki Frantzeskaki
spellingShingle Peter Newton
Niki Frantzeskaki
Creating a National Urban Research and Development Platform for Advancing Urban Experimentation
Sustainability
innovation
experimentation
cities
urban transformation
sustainability transition
urban collaboratory
author_facet Peter Newton
Niki Frantzeskaki
author_sort Peter Newton
title Creating a National Urban Research and Development Platform for Advancing Urban Experimentation
title_short Creating a National Urban Research and Development Platform for Advancing Urban Experimentation
title_full Creating a National Urban Research and Development Platform for Advancing Urban Experimentation
title_fullStr Creating a National Urban Research and Development Platform for Advancing Urban Experimentation
title_full_unstemmed Creating a National Urban Research and Development Platform for Advancing Urban Experimentation
title_sort creating a national urban research and development platform for advancing urban experimentation
publisher MDPI AG
series Sustainability
issn 2071-1050
publishDate 2021-01-01
description Transformative changes are required for a 21st century sustainable urban development transition involving multiple interconnected domains of energy, water, transport, waste, and housing. This will necessitate a step change in performance goals and tangible solutions. Regenerative urban development has emerged as a major pathway, together with decarbonisation, climate adaptation involving new blue-green infrastructures, and transition to a new green, circular economy. These grand challenges are all unlikely to be realised with current urban planning and governance systems within a time frame that can mitigate environmental, economic, and social disruption. A new national platform for urban innovation has been envisaged and implemented in Australia that is capable of enabling engagement of multiple stakeholders across government, industry, and community as well as real time synchronous collaboration, visioning, research synthesis, experimentation, and decision-making. It targets large strategic metropolitan, mission-scale transition challenges as well as more tactical neighbourhood-scale projects. This paper introduces the <i>iHUB</i>: National Urban Research and Development Platform, its underlying concepts, and multiple layers of technical (IT/AV), software/analytical, data, and engagement, as envisioned and implemented in Australia’s four largest capital cities and five collaborating foundation universities.
topic innovation
experimentation
cities
urban transformation
sustainability transition
urban collaboratory
url https://www.mdpi.com/2071-1050/13/2/530
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