Digital Twins: Making Sense of Smarter Resilient and Sustainable Cities evaluates smart city case studies and insights from the 100 IEEE IoT Global Cities Alliance (GCA) and describes best practices and standards for designing secure architecture using IoT, IoP, and AI. Showcasing success stories while also examining common issues from smart city projects around the world, this guide unpacks lessons learned and identifies where to further integrate standards into city frameworks and processes.
Featuring chapters on water, food, energy, mobility, health, waste, education, economies and work, the environment, social wellbeing, ethics, security and privacy, this demonstrates the impact of smart cities on our daily lives. The authors describe the sustainable needs for our next generation and identify the challenges and changes needed to implement smart cities. Readers will learn about Smart City Digital Twins (SCDT), and international Urban Twins (UT), based on architecture, BIM and big data, which support municipalities to digitally simulate 3D models and test strategies and plans for urban planning, mobility, and disaster management. Smart City Digital Twins will use real-time big data from IoT devices and user application transactions to feed models of cities and permit the simulation of new strategies, policies and solutions before physical deployment and negative consequences on citizens and the environment. They also allow monitoring of the effect of decisions and activities once deployed; and offer opportunities, though AI and ML to predict problems, forecast actions which need to be taken and provide trials of modifications.
Aimed at practitioners within the field of smart cities as well as those working more broadly on sustainability and technology, readers will learn about the benefits of a smart city currency, new best practices identified through real use cases, digital twins for cities and what they look like, and strategies, policies, and requirements.