Abstract

In this paper, we take the concept of ‘new urban spaces’ as our jumping off point to engage with the efforts of Alphabet/Google affiliate Sidewalk Labs to cultivate a new integrated digital and infrastructural urban space on the Toronto waterfront. We interrogate the process and politics of imagining this new, digital urban space as an urban socio-technical imaginary. The paper critically examines the central role of ‘big tech’ in producing the urban socio-technical imaginary not as a snapshot but, rather, as a ‘process of becoming’. This processual focus on the role of big tech allows us to develop three interrelated analytical contributions. First, we generate in-depth understanding of the proxy politics of urban socio-technical imaginaries in constituting new digital urban spaces. Second, we argue that an urban socio-technical imaginary was used as a Trojan horse to promote private experimentation with urban governance. Third, we demonstrate attempts to imagine a global beachhead via ‘the global model’ of a new digital urban space predicated on the digital control of integrated urban infrastructure systems.

Highlights

  • We live in an era of planetary urbanisation where the scale and pace of urbanisation and the economic, ecological and social pressures, conditions and responses shaping that have led to a proliferation of urban forms (Brenner, 2019)

  • To address how urban socio-technical imaginaries can help us to better understand the process and politics of new digital urban spaces and the role of global technology companies in this we focus on the extreme case (Flyvbjerg, 2006) of attempts to develop a digital urban neighbourhood, the Quayside, on the Toronto waterfront (Flynn and Valverde, 2019; Leszczynski, 2020; Morgan and Webb, 2020)

  • We show how Sidewalk Labs’ (SL) strategically mobilised a sociotechnical imaginary as a proxy for depoliticisation to create a Trojan horse for new modes of private urban governance, which if instantiated in place would establish a beachhead for global circulation

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Summary

Introduction

We live in an era of planetary urbanisation where the scale and pace of urbanisation and the economic, ecological and social pressures, conditions and responses shaping that have led to a proliferation of urban forms (Brenner, 2019). To address how urban socio-technical imaginaries can help us to better understand the process and politics of new digital urban spaces and the role of global technology companies in this we focus on the extreme case (Flyvbjerg, 2006) of attempts to develop a digital urban neighbourhood, the Quayside, on the Toronto waterfront (Flynn and Valverde, 2019; Leszczynski, 2020; Morgan and Webb, 2020).

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