Abstract

Hamburg participates in the EU-funded research and development project mySMARTlife (mSL) with experiments involving smart city technologies, among others in the field of transportation infrastructure. These experiments are shaped by a public-private consortium in accordance with a call of the EU research and innovation program “Horizon 2020”. They focus on close to the market technologies. The experiments aim at citizen participation. Yet, what technologies are experimented with has been decided and contractually fixed by the consortium beforehand. We explore tensions in this kind of setup, and how entrenched approaches to planning of transportation infrastructure are challenged by new subjectivities, expectations, standards and procedures. From our perspective, it is highly questionable whether a purely expert driven process can produce outcomes that sufficiently reflects local residents’ ideas of sustainable and appropriate changes to urban infrastructures. For this reason, candidate ‘solutions’ for future mobility demands should be exposed to societal deliberation at an earlier stage in their development.Our exploration of (possible) interplays between such an experimental approach to the shaping of infrastructures and the pre-existing integrated approach to planning has been a modest first step, and more empirical research would be needed to draw solid conclusions. It seems worthwhile to analyse more deeply the in- and exclusiveness of the actor constellations in such processes, the role of coincidences or strategies behind the selection of partners, and a possible gate-keeper function of the process initiator.

Highlights

  • The ‘Smart City’ has gained increasing prominence in debates about visions and guidelines for urban development

  • Transmitting the priorities of a European Innovation Platform (EIP) on Smart Cities and Communities (SCC) into local plans and implementations, the consortium clearly narrowed the discussion, e.g. about what sustainable mobility could mean in Hamburg, towards technological and high-tech solutions that correlated with strong economic interests of the automobile industry and ICT companies

  • We found the European Smart Cities and Communities (SCC) calls and the prescriptions it entails to have shaped the debates about the future of mobility infrastructure in Hamburg

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Summary

Introduction

The ‘Smart City’ has gained increasing prominence in debates about visions and guidelines for urban development (de Jong et al, 2015, Mora et al, 2017, Karvonen et al, 2019). In one strand of literature, Smart City initiatives are characterized as highly influential “corporate story telling”, marked by “technocratic reductionism and the introduction of new moral imperatives in urban management” (Söderström et al, 2014:307). From this perspective, key institutions of local planning appear to be strongly influenced by the globally present ideal of the smart city. Instead of “advancing a holistic and rigorous method of city-making, as claimed by their advocates, they are reproposing traditional chaotic urban models which have been around for milleninia” (Cugurullo 2018: 87) According to his observations in cases like Hong Kong and Masdar City, any claims that infrastructural development was decided upon in comprehensive and systematic processes of planning are highly questionable

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