Review of Smart City Assessment Tools
Abstract
:1. Introduction
2. Literature Review
3. Smart City Concept
4. Smart City Assessment
- City rankings draw public attention to major issues affecting the quality of life of the citizens and promote healthy competition;
- City rankings stimulate a broad discussion on regional development strategies;
- Regional actors are forced to make their decisions transparent and comprehensible;
- Positive changes are also registered outside the region;
- The results in detail may initiate the learning effects of local actors;
- On the other hand, the same report identifies the handicaps of city rankings;
- City rankings tend to neglect complex interrelations in regional development;
- The discussion is mainly focused on the bare rank;
- Long-term development strategies may be threatened;
- Existing stereotypes may be strengthened.
5. SCA Research Review and Identified Gaps
- Comprehensiveness:
- a.
- The extent of inclusion of indicators in the selected tools;
- b.
- Distribution pattern of indicators
- Stakeholder engagement;
- Context sensitivity;
- Strategic needs;
- Uncertainty management;
- Interlinkages and interoperability;
- Temporal changes;
- Flexibility;
- Feasibility;
- Presentation and communication of the results;
- Action plans.
- There is a lack of balanced distribution of indicators;
- The most tools have not taken measures to engage stakeholders in their development and implementation processes;
- The majority of the selected tools do not consider locally specific conditions;
- Overall, the issue of feasibility has not been well addressed across the tools;
- Only about 25% of the tools provide recommendations on linking results to action plans.
6. Discussion and Conclusions
- There is a lack of balance distribution of indicators;
- The great majority of the SCA tools are static assessments or snapshots;
- They present limitations when comparing cities with different scales;
- In general, they do not measure or evaluate the impacts on the specific local needs or goals of the implementation;
- The engagement of stakeholders in Smart City developments and implementation processes is not evaluated;
- They do not evaluate the contribution to the United Nations Sustainable Development Goals (SDG) or other worldwide targets/goals;
- The feasibility of the implementations is not evaluated.
Author Contributions
Funding
Conflicts of Interest
References
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Stakeholder | Potential Benefits |
---|---|
Cities and city authorities | |
Investors and funding agencies | |
Researchers |
|
Citizens |
Name, Type and Abbreviation | Main Categories Addressed |
---|---|
ISO 37120:2018 sustainable development of communities – indicators for city services and quality of life International non mandatory standard Abbreviation: ISO 37120 [59] | Economy, education, energy, environment and climate change, finance, governance, health, housing, population and social conditions, recreation, safety, solid waste, sport and culture, telecommunication, transportation, urban/local agriculture and food security, urban planning, wastewater, water |
ISO/DIS 37122:2019 sustainable development in communities - indicators for Smart cities DIS = draft international standard Abbreviation: ISO 37122 [60] | |
ETSI TS 103 463 key performance indicators for sustainable digital multiservice cities TS = technical specification Abbreviation: ETSI indicators [61] | |
ITU-T Y.4901/L.1601 key performance indicators related to the use of information and communication technology in Smart sustainable cities Type: Recommendation Abbreviation: ITU 4901 [41] | ICT, environmental sustainability, productivity, quality of life, equity and social inclusion, physical infrastructure |
ITU-T Y.4902/L.1602 key performance indicators related to the sustainability impacts of information and communication technology in Smart sustainable cities Type: Recommendation Abbreviation: ITU 4902 [62] | Environmental sustainability, productivity, quality of life, equity and social inclusion, physical infrastructure |
ITU-T Y.4903/L.1603 key performance indicators for Smart sustainable cities to assess the achievement of sustainable development goals Recommendation Abbreviation: ITU 4903 [63] | Economy, environment, society and culture |
Sustainable Development Goal 11+ monitoring framework UN Inter-Agency Expert Group definition Abbreviation: UN SDG 11+ indicators [42] | UN SDG targets 11.1, 11.2, 11.3, 11.4, 11.5, 11.6, 11.7, 11a, 11b, 11c, 1.4, 6.3 |
Tool | Year | Primary Developer(s) |
---|---|---|
Lisbon ranking for smart sustainable cities | 2019 | [9] |
Smart Sustainable Cities China | 2019 | [64] |
Cities in Motion Index | 2018 | Center for Globalization and Strategy and IESE Business School’s Department of Strategy [65] |
Global Power City Index | 2018 | The Mori Memorial Foundation’s Institute for Urban Strategies [66] |
Innovation Cities™ Index | 2018 | China Academy of Telecommunication Research and China Communications Standards Association [67] |
EasyPark | 2018 | EasyPark Group [68] |
IoT-Enabled Smart city framework | 2018 | National Institute of Standards and Technology [69] |
Smart Cities Council’s tools and frameworks | 2018 | Smart Cities Council, Australia and New Zealand [70,71] |
What Works Cities | 2018 | Bloomberg Philanthropies [72] |
Code for Smart Communities | 2018 | Smart Cities Council Australian New Zealand and the Green Building Council of Australia [73] |
China Smart City Performance | 2018 | Shen [74] |
Smart City Governments | 2018 | Eden Strategy Institute and ONG&ONG Pte Ltd. [75] |
Assessing Smart City Initiatives for the Mediterranean Region | 2017 | Universidad Politécnica of Madrid (UPM) [76,77] |
Smart Cities Index- India | 2017 | Indian School of Business [45] |
Juniper Research smart city frameworks | 2017 | Juniper Research [77] |
UK Smart Cities Index | 2017 | Navigant Research [78] |
CITYkeys | 2016 | Netherlands Organization for Applied Scientific Research (TNO) [55] |
Networked Society City Index | 2016 | Ericsson in collaboration with Sweco [79] |
Cities of Opportunity | 2016 | PricewaterhouseCoopers (PwC) [80] |
Community KPIs for the IoT and Smart Cities | 2016 | Future Everything [81] |
Gulf States Smart Cities Index | 2016 | Navigant Research [82] |
European Digital Cities Index | 2016 | Nesta [83] |
Smart City Strategic Growth Map | 2016 | ESPRESSO, European Commission [84] |
City IQ Evaluation System | 2015 | Wu [85] |
International Data Corporation (IDC) Smart City Analysis | 2015 | IDC [86] |
Telecommunication and Standardization Sector of International Telecommunication Union (ITU) | 2015 | ITU-T Focus Group on Smart Sustainable Cities [87] |
United Nations Economic Commission for Europe-ITU Smart Sustainable Cities Indicators | 2015 | UNECE Committee on Housing and Land Management, Environment Agency Austria, and ITU [88] |
Smart Cities Ranking of European Medium-sized Cities | 2014 | TU Vienna, in cooperation with the University of Ljubljana and the TU of Delft [21] |
Boyd-Cohen Smart City Index | 2014 | Boyd-Cohen [89] |
Mapping Smart Cities in the EU | 2014 | RAND Europe, European Union (EU) [90] |
Smart City Maturity Model and Self-Assessment Tool | 2014 | The Scottish Government and Scottish Cities Alliance [51,91] |
Smart City Profiles | 2013 | Austrian Climate and Energy Fund and Environment Agency Austria [92] |
United Cities and Local Governments (UCLG) smart cities study | 2012 | City of Bilbao and Committee of Digital and Knowledge-based Cities of UCLG [93] |
Smart Cities Benchmarking in China | 2012 | China Academy of Telecommunication Research and China Communications Standards Association [94] |
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Patrão, C.; Moura, P.; Almeida, A.T.d. Review of Smart City Assessment Tools. Smart Cities 2020, 3, 1117-1132. https://doi.org/10.3390/smartcities3040055
Patrão C, Moura P, Almeida ATd. Review of Smart City Assessment Tools. Smart Cities. 2020; 3(4):1117-1132. https://doi.org/10.3390/smartcities3040055
Chicago/Turabian StylePatrão, Carlos, Pedro Moura, and Anibal T. de Almeida. 2020. "Review of Smart City Assessment Tools" Smart Cities 3, no. 4: 1117-1132. https://doi.org/10.3390/smartcities3040055