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Why Kansas City, Mo., leaders want a smart city—and how they’re doing it

Why Kansas City, Mo., leaders want a smart city—and how they’re doing it

Smart Cities Council Staff Writer Doug Peeples explains how Kansas City, Mo., leaders started small in their quest to make their city a smart city.
  • Written by American City & County Administrator
  • 9th April 2017

By Doug Peeples, Smart Cities Council

There's no single blueprint for how a smart city upgrade should be done because cities aren't the same. They have different needs and different strengths and weaknesses to consider. However, starting small (and scalable) is a practical approach for minimizing risk and possible losses. That's the route Kansas City, Mo. leaders chose when they added a street car line, free public Wi-Fi and smart LED streetlights to a small part of the downtown core.

With phase one of Kansas City's pilot project deemed a success, the city is ready to move on to phase two. The original project affected about 20,000 with the addition of a 2.2-mile streetcar line, Wi-Fi, smart street lights and 25 kiosks that provided information about local restaurants and events.

The expansion will add Wi-Fi to a larger area and additional kiosks will be added. Also, a mobile app will be linked to sensors initially installed to help with street car navigation. The app will alert drivers about available parking spaces.

As Kansas City Chief Innovation Officer Bob Bennett explained to Tech Republic, "Our goal right now is to be the smartest city on planet Earth in five years." He anticipates the public Wi-Fi service area will cover 180,000 more residents within 18 months. And looking further ahead, he commented at a Cisco Live event in July that the city's strategy is for the new services to be so popular the city's other residents will want them.

As the major piece of the project, the Wi-Fi installation offers not only increased connectivity for users, but also the opportunity to collect valuable data. For example, residents and visitors are using the Wi-Fi often enough that data on where and when they travel through the district can be tracked.

Bennett referred to one street corner a large number of people walked by in the morning. Realizing there were no restaurants in the area, he informed the city's economic development council — which secured bids for a new restaurant. The streetcar line also provides useful data.

The city's interest in technology upgrades sparked when it installed Google Fiber five years ago. It got city leaders thinking about how increased connectivity and services integration could better understand what services citizens wanted and needed, and provide them.

 

Cisco's role
Cisco not only suggested building in smart technology capabilities during the streetcar line construction, but has been working with the city throughout the project. Cisco local and education VP Kim Majerus noted "The amount of data and information they're collecting from that streetcar and the usership and the opportunities, I think that itself has paid for the project in gold from the city's perspective."

Bennett said work on the phase two expansion could begin as early as October if the city receives federal funding.

 

Doug Peeples writes about technology and energy for the Smart Cities Council. The Council publishes the free Smart Cities Readiness Guide, which provides help and advice for crafting a smart cities vision, plan of action and method of tracking progress.

 

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