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Journal ArticleDOI

Everything You Wanted to Know About Smart Cities

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TLDR
A smart sustainable city is an innovative city that uses information and communication technologies and other means to improve quality of life, efficiency of urban operations and services, and competitiveness, while ensuring that it meets the needs of present and future generations.
Abstract
This article is a single-source introduction to the emerging concept of smart cities. It can be used for familiarizing researchers with the vast scope of research possible in this application domain. The smart city is primarily a concept, and there is still not a clear and consistent definition among practitioners and academia. As a simplistic explanation, a smart city is a place where traditional networks and services are made more flexible, efficient, and sustainable with the use of information, digital, and telecommunication technologies to improve the city's operations for the benefit of its inhabitants. Smart cities are greener, safer, faster, and friendlier. The different components of a smart city include smart infrastructure, smart transportation, smart energy, smart health care, and smart technology. These components are what make the cities smart and efficient. Information and communication technology (ICT) are enabling keys for transforming traditional cities into smart cities. Two closely related emerging technology frameworks, the Internet of Things (IoT) and big data (BD), make smart cities efficient and responsive. The technology has matured enough to allow smart cities to emerge. However, there is much needed in terms of physical infrastructure, a smart city, the digital technologies translate into better public services for inhabitants and better use of resources while reducing environmental impacts. One of the formal definitions of the smart city is the following: a city "connecting the physical infrastructure, the information-technology infrastructure, the social infrastructure, and the business infrastructure to leverage the collective intelligence of the city" [4]. Another formal and comprehensive definition is "a smart sustainable city is an innovative city that uses information and communication technologies (ICTs) and other means to improve quality of life, efficiency of urban operations and services, and competitiveness, while ensuring that it meets the needs of present and future generations with respect to economic, social and environmental aspects" [12]. A broad overview of various components needed in a smart city is depicted in Figure 1. Any combination of various smart components can make cities smart. A city need not have all the components to be labeled as smart. The number of smart components depends on the cost and available technology.

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Journal ArticleDOI

Towards sustainable smart cities: A review of trends, architectures, components, and open challenges in smart cities

TL;DR: The paper presents a brief overview of smart cities, followed by the features and characteristics, generic architecture, composition, and real-world implementations ofSmart cities, and some challenges and opportunities identified through extensive literature survey on smart cities.
Journal ArticleDOI

Internet of Things (IoT) for Next-Generation Smart Systems: A Review of Current Challenges, Future Trends and Prospects for Emerging 5G-IoT Scenarios

TL;DR: This paper presents the IoT technology from a bird's eye view covering its statistical/architectural trends, use cases, challenges and future prospects, and discusses challenges in the implementation of 5G-IoT due to high data-rates requiring both cloud-based platforms and IoT devices based edge computing.
Journal ArticleDOI

A Survey of Blockchain Technology Applied to Smart Cities: Research Issues and Challenges

TL;DR: A comprehensive survey on the literature involving blockchain technology applied to smart cities, from the perspectives of smart citizen, smart healthcare, smart grid, smart transportation, supply chain management, and others is provided.
Journal ArticleDOI

Smart Cities: A Survey on Data Management, Security, and Enabling Technologies

TL;DR: The fundamental data management techniques employed to ensure consistency, interoperability, granularity, and reusability of the data generated by the underlying IoT for smart cities are described.
Journal ArticleDOI

Internet of Things (IoT) and the Energy Sector

TL;DR: The existing literature on the application of IoT in in energy systems, in general, and in the context of smart grids particularly is reviewed, and challenges of deploying IoT in the energy sector are reviewed, including privacy and security.
References
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Journal ArticleDOI

Internet of Things for Smart Cities

TL;DR: This paper will present and discuss the technical solutions and best-practice guidelines adopted in the Padova Smart City project, a proof-of-concept deployment of an IoT island in the city of Padova, Italy, performed in collaboration with the city municipality.
Journal ArticleDOI

Internet of Things - Technology and Value Added

TL;DR: The fields of application for IoT technologies are as numerous as they are diverse, as IoT solutions are increasingly extending to virtually all areas of everyday.
Proceedings ArticleDOI

Understanding Smart Cities: An Integrative Framework

TL;DR: Eight critical factors are identified that form the basis of an integrative framework that can be used to examine how local governments are envisioning smart city initiatives and suggest directions and agendas for smart city research and outlines practical implications for government professionals.
Journal Article

Internet of Things for Smart Cities

TL;DR: This paper focuses specifically to an urban IoT systems that, while still being quite a broad category, are characterized by their specific application domain and are designed to support the Smart City vision.
Journal ArticleDOI

Foundations for smarter cities

TL;DR: The information technology foundation and principles for Smarter Cities™ are described, which enables the adaptation of city services to the behavior of the inhabitants, which permits the optimal use of the available physical infrastructure and resources.
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What are the key components of a smart city?

The key components of a smart city include smart infrastructure, smart transportation, smart energy, smart health care, and smart technology.