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Creating Smart Cities with GIS

Various trends have influenced the development of GIS in the past decade. Information structures in both business and administration increasingly incorporate GIS components, which requires that geodata is linked with other types of spatial information so that they can be integrated into geographic information systems.

To facilitate this, GIS enables the electronic management and visualisation of spatial data. The primary purpose of GIS during a Smart City development strategy is the collection, modelling, storage, manipulation, analysis, retrieval and presentation of geodata.

Why is GIS significant?

Today digital societies are largely dependent on information. GIS is actively being used to provide solutions in numerous branches of government services as well as in businesses and industry. It integrates spatial information and other relevant data into a single system that can offer specialised processes for the analysis of spatial problems. Geoinformation technology is being used in surveying, engineering, planning and logistics for the collection, processing, management and presentation of spatial information. Organisations are heavily investing in GIS to increase efficiency.

GIS and Smart Cities

GIS for Smart City areas are getting crowded each day. Development of self-sustaining cities appear to be an alternate solution to this problem. Technology is playing a major role in self-sustaining cities. These cities are enabling automation and real-time integrated city monitoring and management through a network of sensors, cameras, wireless devices and data centres. A simpler way to look at these smart cities would be to see them as developed urban area that create sustainable economic development and high quality of life by transcending multiple key areas like economy, environment, mobility, governance, energy efficiency, people and living conditions.

Smart cities present a substantial growth opportunity in the coming years. But they have their challenges too as these projects are rather complex with residential and commercial spaces supported by an infrastructure backbone for power, roads, water, drainage and sewage.

A centralised information system based on GIS provides an IT framework, which integrates not only every stakeholder but also every aspect of smart city processes – starting from conceptualisation, planning, and development to maintenance. GIS is deployed at every stage of planning and development of a Smart City. So what are your steps to implement GIS in a smart city project?

Acquire: Find the right sites for city development, view legal boundaries, arrive at right valuation of your existing/new sites

Planning & Design: Identify deficiencies and determine optimal solutions. Integrate GIS with most design tools, including CAD, BIM bringing greater analytics and cost-estimation capabilities to your infrastructure design process

Construct: Integrate project and financial management software with GIS to better manage projects. GIS can provide a single point of entry for all construction-related documents and files.

Nicola Hyndman

Nicola Hyndman - Marketing Manager

As Marketing Manager, Nicola is passionate about customer service, communication, digital marketing and market research. She strives to keep our community engaged and informed of all developments within our team and application.

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