USC Smart Cities Meeting

USC

The Urban Systems Collaborative (USC) Annual Meeting  Is being held at Imperial College in London today and tomorrow (10-11 September). The meeting is essentially about smart cities but in particular how smart cities affect the quality of life in cities, relating the supportive to the personalised to the adaptive city. Colin Harrison one of the key founders of the USC says: “The USC’s core focus is on the effects of rapidly increasing volumes and velocities of information flow in cities” and the meeting is about how all this relates to these themes. There are some interesting speakers talking today and tomorrow but the keynote on the first day was given by Peter Madden, the CEO of the technology Strategy board’s Future Cities initiative which is geared towards motivating UK firms to generate new software services for smart cities.  The programme is here and the material is being livestreamed and you can access to these streams by clicking here. Lots of CASA people attended and Mike gave a talk which you can access here (Sorry the PDF is a bit big at 6MB due to the frames of the animated percolation).

Posted in Big Data, Complexity, Connectivity, Interactions, Planning Support, Smart Cities | Leave a comment

ECTQG 2013

ECTQG

CASA members presented at this meeting which is being held at Dourdan near Paris September 6-9. Melanie Bosredon and Robin Morphet presented papers on their various models of land use systems and Mike Batty joined Wolfgang Weidlich and Peter Allen for a guided interview on Geography and Complexity led by Arnaud Banos and Denise Pumain. The two keys were on Autocorrelation Everywhere by Dan Griffith and on Large Scale Epidemics by Vittoria Colizza.   See the full programme here.

Posted in Agent-Based Models, Cellular Automata, Complexity, Fractals, Interactions, LUTI models, Urban Models | Leave a comment

The Moving City

kinetics

Riccardo Maria Pulselli from the Ecodynamics Group at the University of Siena has put his fascinating book on urban kinetics online. Click here to view. In it he demonstrates that cities are never in equilibrium, they are always changing, and never still. This is part of the liquid life that now characterizes modernity and it is central and essential to the digital world we have entered. To experience this point of view, read through.

Posted in Cellular Automata, Complexity, Connectivity, Emergence, Interactions, Networks | Leave a comment