innovation. Despite the clear link between society of
creativity and information society, the concept of
"smart city" is still controversial. This occurred
because term "smart" is often associated with digital
functions, and the terms "digital city" and "cyber city"
(Mitchell, 2006) are used alternatively and
equivalently. However, it is certain that, providing a
digital platform or a digital representation of the city
does not adequately justify the description of an urban
system as innovative. In the following sections, the
main framework of the research presented in this
paper elaborates on the above questions and proposes
a new method for a smarter city.
1.1 Research Framework
Digital applications, sensors, and software often
interact towards the creation of the city of the future.
However, the real challenge in contemporary reality
is to develop a "smart city", which starts from the city
of today and enables the combination of smart
practices. The current research attempts to define the
concept of the smart city based on the structure of an
existing city. Due to this, Landscape is introduced as
a parameter, which in the proposed method acts as a
key reformer of the urban fabric.
This paper is organized in two main parts. The first
part addresses methodological issues: the importance
of landscape ecology and its application to
metropolitan planning; and the range of model
approaches available in order to create a smarter city.
The second part of the paper addresses a new
methodological approach to design with emphasis on
the landscaping component; the implementation of
CA in this strategy; followed by an extended
discussion; and ending with some conclusions.
2 THE STATE OF THE ART
Landscape Urbanism is a neologism, introduced in
1996 by Charles Waldheim that attempts to describe
the landscape as an urban phenomenon, on an effort
to reduce the conflicts between the man-made and
natural environment of the cities. Landscape
Urbanism is today a thriving interdisciplinary
practice that emerges as a renewed perception for
recording, dealing with, and strategically examining,
or designing, towards contemporary problems of the
structure of the urban landscape.
Waldheim, through a presentation of two projects
from the 1930’s and 40’s, presents the early
emergence of an "organic urbanism" which can be
viewed as early versions of landscape urbanism
principles. His account in these projects becomes the
basis for a brief look into the rise of this organic way
of thinking – that is the rise of landscape urbanism.
2.1 Defining the Idea of a Smarter City
based on the Landscape
As mentioned earlier, the natural landscape, on the
one hand, is the lens through which we can describe
and visualize the smarter city, while on the other
hand, the appreciation of the natural landscape is
linked to a search for the landscapes dynamic
capabilities as a design standard. Therefore, the
landscape comes into the public scene as an indicator
of the sustainable growth of the urban fabric, and as
an indicator of sustainability to the extent that it can
control the delicate dynamic balance between the
natural space and the urban fabric. This renders
landscape an attractive intervention environment
worthy of a smarter city. In this paper, we will try to
outline methods and strategies that can manage the
dynamic conditions of the natural landscape.
Specifically, the aim of the presented research is to
propose a method for managing the landscape in the
form of a diagram, and an approach, which will be
linked with the concept of a smarter city, that is based
and builds on the city of today.
3 THE MEASURING AND
MINING URBAN DATA
The need to incorporate the ecological component in
regional planning and landscape ecology ideas is
broadly acknowledged as the fitting reason for
environmental planning in urbanizing , however there
is as yet a gap between the hypothetical originations
of scene biology, the advancement of demonstrating
approaches and the genuine usage of coordinated
metropolitan planning. Such a comprehensive
methodology requires a complex framework
approach, so as to more readily comprehend the
procedures included and to guarantee that future
urban structures are practical and ecologically benign.
Then, and most likely because of the absence of
incorporated investigation and planning, there is an
absence of instruments accessible to lead dynamic
recreations of metropolitan land use change that
coordinate landscape ecological concepts and
principles.
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