Smart Cities – From Concept to Reality

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Smart Cities

Smart Cities

Smart Cities –

Smart Cities –

 –

 –

From Concept to Reality

From Concept to Reality

From Concept to Reality

From Concept to Reality

An intrinsic union of connectivity, sustainability and profitability 

An intrinsic union of connectivity, sustainability and profitability 

An intrinsic union of connectivity, sustainability and profitability 

An intrinsic union of connectivity, sustainability and profitability 

Presented by:

Presented by:

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Industry Manager

Industry Manager

Energy and Environment

Energy and Environment

Nov 20, 2013

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Industry Manager, Energy & Environment

Industry Manager, Energy & Environment

•• Over

Over 15 ye

15 years of in

ars of industr

dustry expe

y experien

rience; 7 ye

ce; 7 years wi

ars with Frost & S

th Frost & Sulli

ullivan’

van’s in Ener

s in Energy

gy

& Environment Practice

& Environment Practice

•• Multiple

Multiple publicatio

publications in

ns in the

the building

building technologi

technologies and

es and services

services industry

industry, incl

, including

uding

energy efficiency, smart buildings, smart cities, connected homes and related

energy efficiency, smart buildings, smart cities, connected homes and related

service sectors

service sectors

•• Lead

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gies and

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services

ices

firms in an advisory capacity

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Focus Points

• What drives smart cities

• Key trends in urbanization

• Market prospects for smart city segments

• Business models of the smart city concept

• Key takeaways

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Resource

Management

Connectivity and

Information

Sharing

Sustainability with

Social

Res onsibilit

Monitoring and

Diagnostics

Cross-impact of

Diverse Issues

Logistics and

Transportation

What Drives Smart Cities

Global Challenges prompting the need for Smart Cities 

Energy Crisis

Green Supply

Chain Management

Source: Frost & Sullivan

Scalable and Agile

Urban Environments

Low Emission

Future

Environmental

Protection and

Security

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1950s Urbanization

2000s Suburbanization

2020s: Branded Cities

Creation of the historic center and districts

Ring road

motorway, living

areas growing

outside the ring

road as seen in

London

Western Hemisphere will

face an increasing trend of

deurbanization 

Urbanization Trends will Impact Smart City Development

Needs from emerging deurbanized cities and corridors will create new challenges and opportunities 

2015s Network City

Urban sprawl, first highways and ring road

Third suburban area and cities along the highways created, ring road overblown by urban sprawl

•Emerging urban layouts will have a

tremendous impact on smart city

development in the future 

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Over 40 Global Cities to be SMART Cities in 2020: More than 50% of

smart cities of 2025 will be from Europe and North America.

Boulder  Vancouver  Toronto San Francisco Portland  Seattle Montreal  St Davids Clonburris Göteborg Hammarby Sjöstad  London Reykjavik    Oslo Freiburg Stockholm Paris Copenhagen GIFT  Dongtan Tianjin Songdo  Amsterdam Boulder  Vancouver  Toronto San Francisco Portland  Seattle Montreal  St Davids Clonburris Göteborg Hammarby Sjöstad  London Reykjavik    Oslo Freiburg Stockholm Paris Copenhagen GIFT  Dongtan Tianjin Songdo  Amsterdam Boulder  Vancouver  Toronto San Francisco Portland  Seattle Montreal  St Davids Clonburris Göteborg Hammarby Sjöstad  London Reykjavik    Oslo Freiburg Stockholm Paris Copenhagen GIFT  Dongtan Tianjin Songdo  Amsterdam

Cities built from scratch

Existing eco cities

Existing eco megacities

Treasure Island 

 Arcosanti 

Coyote Springs Destiny  Babcock Ranch Curitiba Bogota Barcelona Kochi  Cape Town Pune Changsha

Khajuraho Meixi Lake

Waitakere, N.Z. Singapore City 

Moreland, Australia Treasure Island 

 Arcosanti 

Coyote Springs Destiny  Babcock Ranch Curitiba Bogota Barcelona Kochi  Cape Town Pune Changsha

Khajuraho Meixi Lake

Waitakere, N.Z. Singapore City 

Moreland, Australia Treasure Island 

 Arcosanti 

Coyote Springs Destiny  Babcock Ranch Curitiba Bogota Barcelona Kochi  Cape Town Pune Changsha

Khajuraho Meixi Lake

Waitakere, N.Z. Singapore City 

Moreland, Australia

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Smart Infrastructure: Multimodal

transport hubs providing air, rail,

road connectivity to other

megacities.

Smart Technology:

Intelligent

communications

systems connecting

home, office, iPhone

and car on a single

wireless IT platform.

Smart Energy: About 20%

of the energy produced in

a city will be renewable

(wind, solar).

Smart Buildings: At least 50%

of buildings will be green and

intelligent, built with building

integrated photovoltaics

(BIPV); 20% of the buildings

will be net zero energy

buildings.

Megatrends in parallel

industries will influence

core smart city

Smart Cities and Industry Integration

Satellite Towns: The main

city center will merge with

several satellite towns to

form one megacity.

Smart Cars: At least 10% of cars will

be electric, with free fast-charging

stations every half mile.

Smart Grid:

Infrastructure to

enable real-time

monitoring of

power flow and

provide energy

surplus back to the

grid.

Source: Google Images 

components and

present opportunities

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The Smart City Value Proposition

Revenue Opportunities 

(12)

Smart Convergence

(13)

Smart Buildings

Facilitating the smart city value proposition 

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Smart City Business Models

The city as the customer 

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What are the implications?

• Collaborative project approaches

• Convergence of competition

• Big data management

• New business models

Open Models

Consortia Building

Shared Services

Digital Infrastructure

Funding Mechanisms

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Frost & Sullivan’s Associated Research

• Urbanization and Mega Cities, and impact on industries and business

• Strategic Opportunity Analysis of the Global Smart City Market

(19)

Next Steps

Develop Your Visionary and Innovative Skills

Growth Partnership Service

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join our GIL Global Community

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Keep abreast of innovative growth opportunities

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For Additional Information

Liz Clark

Corporate Communications

Energy & Environment

(210) 477-8483

Liz.clark@frost.com

Konkana Khaund

Research Analyst

Energy & Environment

(416) 490-2673

Konkana.khaund@frost.com

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Roberta Gamble

Research Manager

Energy & Environment

(650) 475-4522

Roberta.gamble@frost.com

Nils Frenkel

Sales Manager

Energy & Environment

(210) 247-2451

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