Creating a Roadmap for Smart City Development based on Regional
Strategy Work
Mikko Mantyneva and Heikki Ruohomaa
Smart Service Research Unit, Häme University of Applied Sciences, PO Box 230, 13101 Hämeenlinna, Finland
Keywords: Roadmap, Strategy, Smart City.
Abstract: This paper focuses on introducing a strategy linked roadmap supporting coordinated and collaborative smart
city development between various stakeholders. The primary focus on the roadmapping work is to identify
those actions required to make smart city ambitions a reality in a region. In a case study, a roadmapping
approach is linked to regional strategy work in Southern Finland. The introduced roadmap is generic by nature
and it could be applied also to other cities and regions willing to steer their smart city initiatives further.
1 INTRODUCTION
Urban areas and cities are complex social ecosystems
and the coordinated development of them is a
challenging endeavor. This article is about how to
steer a coordinated co-development between various
stakeholders to make a smart city to become a reality.
On broad sense, smart cities can be categorized into
two major groups: 1) high technology and
infrastructure intensive approach (e.g. Seoul,
Santander, Rio de Janeiro, Barcelona), and 2) citizen-
centric approach (e.g. Montreal, Amsterdam,
Copenhagen, Helsinki, Manchester) (d. Bergh &
Viaene, 2015).
Anthopoulos & Fitsilis (2014) define a smart city
as an ICT-based infrastructure and services
environment that enhance a city’s intelligence,
quality of life and other attributes (i.e. environment,
entrepreneurship, education, culture, transportation
etc.) One interesting addition to the concept of the
smart city is the concept of smart community.
Giffinger & Gudrun (2010) define smart community
in a following way: “A smart community is a
community that has made a conscious effort to use
information technology to transform life and work
within its region in significant and fundamental rather
than incremental ways.” The concept of the smart
community could better serve the actual focus of this
particular paper while the main focus is on regional
development expanding the formal city limits.
Den Bergh & Viaene (2015) argue that smart
cities are typical phenomenon to talk about within
local governmental institutions and associations of
cities. However, the challenge remains on what it
actually requires to become a smart city. Chourabi et
al. (2012) state that the success of smart city
initiatives relies heavily on managerial factors.
According to them, there is a lack of academic studies
focusing on the managerial aspects of a smart city
ambition. More and more cities are taking a strategic
approach to become smart. However, most of them
have the challenge to figure out the entity of becom-
ing smart. How to connect smaller projects with each
other and steer the progress from end-to-end.
The research problem of this paper is: How to
make smart city ambitions a reality in a region?
This paper intends to build on existing strategy
work of a region to support smart city development
by providing detailed contents of a roadmap. This
roadmap could then be applied to clarify the actual
steps it requires to become a smart city.
Innovation in a smart city environment requires an
ecosystem approach where local authorities do not act
in isolation but in collaboration with other
stakeholders in the ecosystem (Chourabi et al. 2012).
Komninos et al. (2012) argue that smart cities are part
of an open innovation ecosystem, which also supports
smart city’s development. In order to support the
innovation ecosystem for smart city development,
various public-private partnerships should be created
and fostered (Lee & Hancock 2012). Den Bergh &
Viaene (2015) emphasize the need for
experimentation in order to support the adaptation of
facilitating/permitting technology. According to
Hielkema & Hongisto (2013), living labs are one
Mantyneva, M. and Ruohomaa, H.
Creating a Roadmap for Smart City Development based on Regional Strategy Work.
DOI: 10.5220/0006665201510156
In Proceedings of the 7th International Conference on Smart Cities and Green ICT Systems (SMARTGREENS 2018), pages 151-156
ISBN: 978-989-758-292-9
Copyright
c
2019 by SCITEPRESS Science and Technology Publications, Lda. All rights reserved
151
relevant approach to incubate innovation and
knowledge. Typically living labs have diverse
functions and their activities are aligned with user-
driven innovation principles.
From management perspective a smart city is
more complex compared to traditional urban planning
while it implies interaction among various
stakeholders that are involved with different
subsystems (transportation, health, and environment
among others) (Komninos et al. 2012). Cities
intending to become smart cities should prepare
strategic plans and follow them (Nam & Pardo 2011).
Glasmeier & Christopherson (2015) argue that in the
vast majority of smart city related cases the actual
implementation is more about renovation rather than
about building completely new urban environments.
This is the reason why smart city development should
be managed as a transition rather than a project
focusing on developing something completely new.
As part of future strategy work, the cities ought to
focus on identifying their strengths and build on those
(Lazaroiu & Roscia, 2012). A roadmap approach
focuses on the transition, not on building up a new
smart city from the scratch.
Komninos et al. (2011) have studied how the
creation of a common roadmap for urban innovation
and economic development makes it easier to find
consensus between stakeholders on shared longer-
term objectives and their priorities. According to Lee
& Hancock (2012), roadmapping is a viable
methodology for seeking a shared understanding of
future development. Garcia & Bray (1997) imply that
according to the roadmapping literature the
roadmapping process consists of three subsequent
phases: these phases are 1) preliminary activity, 2)
actual development of the roadmap, and 3) follow-up
activity. In order to make a strategy implementation
really happen is to prepare a concrete roadmap
guiding future actions required.
2 CASE STUDY - SMART HÄME
The applied case study in this paper is linked to the
Growth Corridor Finland and especially one sub-
region on that geographical corridor. The Growth
Corridor is located in southern Finland between the
cities of Helsinki, Hämeenlinna, and Tampere, thus
binding three sub-regions together. On both ends of
the Growth Corridor, there are two smart cities that
are identified and documented as smart cities in
literature. Helsinki, the capital of Finland, is covered
among others by (Hielkema & Hongisto 2013). The
smart city development of Tampere is documented
among others by Caragliu et al. (2013) and
Anthopoulos & Fitsilis (2014). Almost 40 percent of
all jobs in the country are within the region and nearly
half of the turnover of Finnish companies is generated
in the growth corridor. This paper is focused on the
Hämeenlinna sub-region (Proper Häme region). The
case name Smart Häme is applied in this paper to
remind about the historical name of the region. The
vision of the corridor is to gain a recognized position
as a growth platform of Finnish competence, as
Finland's largest pool of skilled labor and as a basis
of national competitiveness. In the long run, the
corridor ensures sustainable growth, energy
efficiency and new export-led business.
The Growth Corridor itself has a roadmap
including among others following steps or activities:
National level steering of regional development,
becoming an experimentation platform as means of
combining people, organizations, and projects. The
development is intended to be implemented through
managing a portfolio consisting of several projects. In
order to meet the needs of both private businesses as
well as public sector organizations, active networking
is required. However, it seems that the roadmap is not
as detailed as the one proposed in this paper.
The strategic plan is based on foresight work
covering future trends. The regional strategic plan is
a long-term vision and strategy. Province plan
assigned to pursue the development of the province
and the general guidelines for the development until
the year 2040. Regional strategic plan objectives will
be specified in the annual provincial program, as well
as the regional strategic program implementation plan
and regional plan.
Regional strategic plan’s strategic priorities are:
1) growth corridors and accessibility, 2) diverse
housing and welfare, 3) bio-based economy and
sustainable use of natural resources, 4) the
possibilities for the manufacturing industry, 5)
internationalization and 6) attraction of the region.
The importance of regional development is to
create synergies and concentration of investment
cooperation between public and private actors.
Increasing the development of a critical mass of
resources facilitates the creation and development of
successful businesses through innovation successful
business. One challenge in Proper Häme is to improve
the awareness and visibility among international
investors and operators in the region, and the internal
and external connections. The implementation of the
smart city is supported by a smart specialization
strategy.
In a smart specialization is also important to be
able to react quickly to meet the needs of emerging
SMARTGREENS 2018 - 7th International Conference on Smart Cities and Green ICT Systems
152
industries. Also, promoting new entrepreneurship is
important. In addition potential new startups,
companies operating in traditional industries must
invest in active experimentation culture, rapid and
agile development projects, digitalization new
opportunities provided by digitization and co-
operation between stakeholders. Smart specialization it
is expected to strengthen the already strong and
emerging industries, enhance entrepreneurship and
promote international competitiveness. Proper Häme’s
smart specialization priorities for the period 2018-2021
has been prepared in cooperation with the province's
analysis of the strengths and utilizing statistical data.
Neirotti et al. (2014) classify different Smart City
initiatives to various domains and even sub-domains.
These domains are linked to the smart specializations
in the roadmap. Giffinger & Gudrun (2010) propose
that a smart city can be observed from six main
dimensions (a smart economy, smart mobility, a
smart environment, smart people, smart living, and
smart governance). This paper takes another
perspective and covers these smart city-related
domains from four areas of specialization: Smart
City, Smart Agriculture, Smart Factory, and Smart
Health. In the following, these four areas of smart
specialization are introduced.
Smart City
In future city structure will be more mixed with each
other, overlapping the housing, logistics, work and
other activities. Digital services enable features such
as location-independent work, which may occur, for
example, the automatic guided vehicle in connection
with work or leisure-related trips. This may involve
an assembly for automatic vehicles very close to each
other in a sequence of passing vehicles or for one
driver to control the car why many combinations.
The main objective of Proper Häme’s transport
system related development is to support sustainable
growth in the province, to improve the functionality
and safety of everyday life, as well as to ensure good
accessibility of the province. Transport automation is
evolving rapidly. In 2040, an autonomous robotic
vehicle is likely to be a fairly conventional mover on
our roads. These autonomous cars have become more
common in 25 to 30-year time span. This is done
while the vehicle fleet is renewed. However, the
prerequisite is the development of enabling
legislation supporting automatic door openers,
communicating with the vehicles and the use of the
infrastructure. Adapting Mobility as a Service (MaaS)
is about to be a combination of smart transport
systems with a door-to-door emphasis.
Smart Agriculture
Sustainable use, bio-economy and circular economy
of natural resources, play a very important role in the
EU and Finland's innovation strategies and
development programs. Proper Häme has strong
expertise in these areas. Energy efficiency and
effective use of resources are becoming increasingly
important targets. While resources are scarce and
recycling of resources becomes an important
competitive factor. The circular economy is related to
the use of resources and materials improved in such a
way that both the raw materials and their value will
remain in circulation. In practice, this may mean, for
example, that the product is designed so that the
materials are separated and recycled.
Low-carbon and green economy is driven by
international agreements, such as emissions trading
and a commitment to complying with international
climate agreement greenhouse gas emission
reduction targets are increasingly influenced by the
business community and individual consumers.
Resources
The food industry needs domestic agriculture.
Finnish conditions in the food industry largely depend
on access to domestic raw materials. Agriculture and
forestry production changes and changes in the
demand for a new kind of breeding solutions. Also,
the Finns ore and mineral resources are the subjects
of increasing international interest.
Smart Factory
The manufacturing industry is one of the traditional
strong industries in Proper Häme region. Digitization
is expected to change the manufacturing industry
significantly. Future challenges include increasing
industry’s competitiveness and productivity. Changes
in global demand for products and raw materials,
production pressures to move to lower-cost countries
and the change in the age structure of Finland’s
population greatly affect the future of Finland's
industrial structure. One objective is to increase
smartness to the industry by adapting the Industry 4.0
framework.
Smart Health
Health and well-being are areas that increased
utilization of technology (applications, data, genetic
engineering) provides lots of opportunities. People
have access to more and better ways to manage and
promote their own health advances in technology. On
the other hand, the growth related to the health and
well-being associated with prosperity that is, those
Creating a Roadmap for Smart City Development based on Regional Strategy Work
153
who can afford to invest in their health. Thus, the health
and well-being can also be formed more strongly in
different parts of the population as a distinctive factor.
From social equality and inclusion perspective, these
issues should be taken into account as well.
In Finland, as well as in most European countries,
the population is aging and the need for services is
growing. While the aging is also declining the share
of working-age people the current way of taking care
of healthcare as well as social care especially among
elderly people has to be changed. One route to
increase productivity and availability of health and
social care services is the adaptation of technology.
Table 1: A phased roadmap for linking regional strategy work towards smart city development (adapted from Lee et al. 2013).
Preliminary
activity
Phase 1: Planning Step 1. Smart city mid- to long-term
vision and goals identified
Step 2. Definition of roadmap Activity 1. Individual objectives of the
roadmap
Activity 2. Setting roadmap boundaries and
scopes
Activity 3. Defining an individual timetable
Step 3. Critical success factors for the
roadmap considered
Step 4. Organization of the project team Activity 1. Identify the party responsible for
the development of the roadmap
Activity 2. Form a working group
Development
activity of
integrated
roadmap
Phase 2. Demand
identification
Step 1. Identify urban problems
Step 2. Infer demands and solutions
Phase 3. Service
identification
Step 1. Smart city services
classification
Step 2. Analysis of service trends
(Delphi)
Phase 4.
Technology
identification
Step 1. Smart city technologies
identification
Activity 1. Set classification standards for
technologies
Activity 2. List technologies
Activity 3. Establishment and verification of
classification system
Step 2. Analysis of technical trends
(Delphi)
Phase 5.
Roadmap drafting
Step 1. Develop roadmap formats
Step 2. Analyze interdependencies
between service/device/technology
Step 3. Develop integrated roadmap
Phase 6.
Roadmap
adjustment
Step 1. Roadmap adjustment
Step 2. Roadmap verification
Follow-up
activity
Phase 7. Follow-
up stage
Step 1. Development of execution plan
Step 2. Execution of plan
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Active retirement age is increasing consumption
of services. Demand for leisure and cultural services
is increasing, and this will benefit in particular those
regions that are able to provide these services and to
take into account the needs of older citizens.
3 GUIDANCE ON PREPARING A
MORE DETAILED ROADMAP
TO SUPPORT SMART
CITY-RELATED STRATEGY
IMPLEMENTATION
This paper drafts guidelines on how to support
transitioning towards a smart city by adapting a
modified roadmapping approach developed in South
Korea originally by Lee et al. (2013). They have
introduced an integrated service-device-technology
roadmap for smart city development. Our paper
adapts a modified approach of some parts of their
work to structure a roadmap for smart city
development. However, since the emphasis of this
paper is not directly linked to enabling technologies
we have cut of some phases or steps from their
framework.
The approach is such that a suggested
roadmapping approach is presented in Table 1. By
introducing this generic roadmap for strategy linked
smart city development the intention is to support also
other cities and communities with smart city
ambitions to be able to proceed more systematically.
The roadmap to be developed could serve as an
important strategic documentation supporting
communicating and directing various smart city-
related initiatives.
Adapting various timeframes could be applied to
provide a more detailed guidance on where to focus
on various moments of time. These timeframes could
be near future, mid-future and far future. It is
suggested that the far future timeframe would be set
in the case study’s example until the year 2040 and
thus link it to regional strategy work.
In order to create the contents of the roadmap, a
series of workshops, several surveys, and in-depth
interviews would be required. These activities belong
to the next action items if there is further interest to
apply smart city roadmap and link it to existing
regional strategy work.
4 CONCLUSIONS AND
SUGGESTIONS FOR FURTHER
RESEARCH
This paper has described a regional strategy linked
roadmap to support co-ordinated and collaborative
smart city development. A roadmap is expected to
support co-ordination between various interest
groups involved as well as between the projects
related to the smart city initiative. The intention is
such that the developed roadmap would serve as an
important strategic resource and communication tool
to support smart city development. Through the
introduced case study, the following lessons have
been identified, which may be relevant to similar
projects in the future.
To be better able to coordinate and allocate
resources for development work that is expected to
last over twenty years it is important to have a strategy
linked roadmap for smart city development. A
developed detailed roadmap would provide a
comprehensive and unified view of current and future
trends and actions required for smart city
development. A detailed roadmap is important while
it is expected that there is limited guidance on how to
proceed in phases to make smart city ambitions a
reality. A national, as well as regional, co-ordination
would be beneficial to align various smart city-related
initiatives and projects. Also, communication and real
collaboration between various stakeholders is
important. Too often, each city is individually
developing their own services and enabling
infrastructure supporting the smart city.
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