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Page 1: NEXT-GENERATION SMART  · PDF fileNEXT-GENERATION SMART CITIES ... Federal University and International Representation ... Tangerang Selatan City Tangerang Selatan Tangerang

www.smartcitiesweek.com

MAY 8-10, 2017 SILICON VALLEY

NEXT-GENERATION SMART CITIES

Santa Clara Convention Center I Santa Clara, CA

POST SHOW REPORT

#SCWSV Produced by:

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We see cities not as they are, but as they could be. We look forward and seek bold ideas while dreaming big. We team with city leaders to identify and tackle problems that others think are impossible to solve–helping usher cities into the future.

Unlock your city’s potential

Copyright © 2017 Deloitte Development LLC. All rights reserved.

Learn more: smartcity.deloitte.com

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A NOTE FROM THE CHAIRMAN

The smart city movement is far more than a trend. It’s a race. A race to attract jobs and talent by providing a state-of-the-art digital infrastructure. A race to reduce carbon emissions and improve air quality. A race to reduce income disparity by providing “ladders of opportunity” to those less fortunate.

Like all races, it will have winners and losers. At Smart Cities Week Silicon Valley, we did our best to give your city an early mover advantage.

We welcomed Congresswoman Suzan DelBene to explain her goal for Congress to invest in smart city pilots. We brought in CIOs and CTOs from Philadelphia, Seattle, San Jose and San Leandro to explain how they are helping their cities get ahead. And we heard from the five winners of the Council’s 2017 Challenge Grants – Austin, Indianapolis, Miami, Orlando and Philadelphia – to share their ideas and best practices.

Throughout our three days in Silicon Valley, we got early looks and advice on next-generation technologies. Artificial intelligence. Autonomous vehicles. Advanced analytics. Mobile applications. And many other smart technologies that cities are using to gain a competitive edge.

How can your city get and keep such an advantage? It starts with smart infrastructure. Imagine a city in 1917 that decided NOT to put in paved roads. NOT to supply electricity to everyone. NOT to put in phone lines.

Now imagine a city in 2017 that decides NOT to pursue smart infrastructure. It will soon fall behind.

That’s why we’re dedicating Smart Cities Week Washington, D.C., to smart infrastructure. To teaching you why, when and how to add digital intelligence to your infrastructure, whether new or existing.

When you join us at Smart Cities Week Washington, D.C., October 3-5, you’ll also get details on how to enter your city into our 2018 Challenge Grants, where it can win products, services and vendor-neutral mentoring worth hundreds of thousands of dollars. You’ll hear from leading providers with experience helping cities of all sizes get smart. And you’ll meet peers from hundreds of cities and dozens of countries, as they gather to share best practices and lessons learned.

I said that the smart cities movement is a race. A marathon, to be more accurate. And the Smart Cities Council is here to help you every step of the way. At our Smart Cities Week conferences. At the Readiness Workshops we bring directly to cities. And on our web site, where you can read case studies, sign up for our newsletter, or access the free Smart Cities Readiness Guide, the leading handbook for urban transformation.

Yours for livability, workability and sustainability,

Jesse BerstChairman, Smart Cities Council

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TESTIMONIALS

“Deloitte’s sponsorship of Smart Cities Week Silicon Valley provided us a valuable opportunity to connect with and – more importantly – listen to city leaders as they shared the key issues they are facing in regard to their smart city aspirations. And we heard from these leaders that the time for action is now.”Rana Sen, Managing Director at Deloitte Consulting LLP and US Public Sector Smart City Initiative Leader

“Coming from the federal sector, it’s always a treat to listen in on the challenges state and local governments are facing, and – even better – getting the opportunity to hear folks talk about the solutions coming online. With Deloitte, I plan to take my experience working with Secretary Foxx to help accelerate solutions to cities, regions and governments.”Vinn White, Specialist Leader, Deloitte Consulting

“I loved the conference, it was high quality. Great city leaders involved. Various sessions helped me to enhance my understanding of how some city leaders strategize and why.”Bas Boorsma, Director Internet of Everything & City Digitization, North Europe at Cisco

“The Santa Clara Smart Cities Week summit was an excellent venue for Advance Property eXposure (APX) to showcase our leading Public Safety mobile first software with so many CIO’s and city leaders. The well-organized event allowed APX to demonstrate the power of Smart Mobile technology and its priceless role in making the smart cities of the future SAFER and IoT connected.”Paul Martin, President/CEO, APX

“Smart Cities Week Silicon Valley was a great opportunity to achieve direct contacts with decision makers in our industry.”Kristjan Lind, CEO, Bikeep

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ATTENDEES

www.smartcitiesweek.com

Smart Cities Week Silicon Valley attracted over 450 participants from 43 U.S. cities and 17 states and 18 countries.

Below is a snapshot:

5

CITY AND COUNTY GOVERNMENT ATTENDEE ROLES INCLUDED:

• Assistant Business Administrator

• Assistant City Manager

• Assistant City Manager

• Associate Planner

• Business Development Manager

• Chief Data Officer

• Chief Information Officer

• Chief Innovation Officer

• Chief Sustainability Officer

• Chief Technology Officer

• City Councilman

• City Engineer

• City Manager

• City Planner

• City Traffic Engineer

• Communications Officer

• Community Development Director

• Community Relations Manager

• Council Member

• Councilmember

• County Executive

• Data Analytics Lead

• Data Analytics Program lead

• Deputy City Manager

• Deputy Director for Utility Services

• Director Information Services Department

• Director of Community Development

• Director of Economic Development

• Director of Information Technology

• Director of Public Affairs

• Director of Public Works

• Division Manager

• Economic Development Commissioner

• Economic Development Manager

• Enterprise Architect

• Executive Assistant

• Geographic Information Systems Coordinator

• Human Resources Analyst

• Information Technology Director

• Innovation and Technology Encore Fellow

• IT Data Architect

• IT Director

• IT Manager

• Mayor

• Planning Manager

• Principal Planner

• Program Manager

• Program Manager for Innovation Management

• Project Manager Public Works Department

• Public Works Director

• Senior Administrative Analyst

• Senior Advisor to the County Executive

• Senior Project Manager

• Senior Transportation Specialist

• Smart Cities Manager

• Sustainability Manager

• Technology Services Manager

• Transit Services Coordinator

CITY, COUNTY AND MUNICIPALITY GOVERNMENT OFFICIALS FROM:

• Alameda, CA

• Alameda County, CA

• American Canyon, CA

• Austin, TX

• Birmingham, MI

• Chandler, AZ

• Chula Vista, CA

• Concord, MA

• Hayward, CA

• Hoboken, NJ

• Indianapolis, IN

• Los Altos, CA

• Los Angeles, CA

• Manhattan Beach, CA

• Menlo Park, CA

• Miami, FL

• Milpitas, CA

• Morgan Hill, CA

• Mountain View, CA

• Newcastle County, DE

• Newport News, VA

• Orlando, FL

• Palo Alto, CA

• Philadelphia, PA

• Plano, TX

• Pleasanton, CA

• Portland, OR

• Providence, RI

• Rancho Cucamonga, CA

• Redlands, CA

• Redwood City, CA

• Sacramento, CA

• San Diego, CA

• San Jose, CA

• San Leandro, CA

• San Mateo County, CA

• Sandy Springs, GA

• Santa Clara, CA

• Santa Clara County, CA

• Santa Clarita, CA

• Seat Pleasant, MD

• Seattle, WA

• Somerset, KY

• Sunnyvale, CA

• Walnut, CA

• West Sacramento, CA

• New Castle, DE

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ATTENDEES

State, Federal University and International Representation

Bay Area Metropolitan Transportation Commission San Francisco CA United States

Bogor Municipality Government Bogor Bogor Indonesia

California Labor Management Committee San Jose CA United States

California's 17th Congressional District San Francisco CA United States

Columbia University New York NY United States

Department of Communications and Informatics of

Tangerang Selatan City

Tangerang

Selatan

Tangerang

Selatan

Indonesia

Embassy of Slovakia Washington D.C. United States

Institute of Technology Bandung Bandung Bandung Indonesia

Intelligent Transportation Society of America Washington D.C. United States

Moscow Agency of Innovations Moscow Moscow Russia

NASA Ames Research Center Mountain View CA United States

National Institute of Standards and Technology Gaithersburg MD United States

National Telecommunications and Information

Administration

Washington D.C. United States

Port of San Diego San Diego CA United States

Princess Nourah Bint Abdulrahman University Riyadh Riyadh Saudi Arabia

Southern California Association of Governments Los Angeles CA United States

The Economic Roundtable Los Angeles CA United States

Trade Commission of Spain Los Angeles CA United States

UC Berkeley Berkeley CA United States

University of Calgary Calgary AB Canada

University of Kansas Lawrence KC United States

University of Texas Austin TX United States

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CONFERENCE HIGHLIGHTS

New ideas, big ideas, smart ideas emerge at Smart Cities Week Silicon Valley

Smart Cities Council gathered inventors and technologists and pioneers and civic leaders in the innovation capital of the world for a preview of what’s ahead for the cities of tomorrow and the technologies that will shape them. The conference was the first West Coast Smart Cities Week hosted by the Smart Cities Council, the world’s largest smart cities network and an advocate for more livable, workable and sustainable cities that benefit all citizens. Major sponsors of the event included Deloitte, Hitachi, Comcast/machineQ, Fybr, Microsoft and Victor Stanley.

Congresswoman urges Smart Cities Week participants to “keep thinking big”

In a keynote address, U.S. Rep. Suzan DelBene (D-WA), a leading technology advocate in Congress, says there are huge opportunities for cities large and small, urban and rural, to take advantage of new technologies – and Congress should help. She wants Congress to invest “modest federal funds” in smart cities pilots to better understand their potential and establish best practices. “My challenge to you,” she told Smart Cities Week participants, “Is to keep thinking big, come up with great ideas and try things.”

Smart Cities Council honors trailblazing start-ups with Innovation Alley Awards

Two start-ups competing for Innovation Alley Awards – Calgary-based LocalIntel and CNX of Kentucky – were honored for their commitment to providing solutions that help municipalities connect more effectively with the business community to spur economic development and innovation. “Every new frontier has its trailblazers that go out and find paths that will lead the rest of us to a better place,” said Smart Cities Council Chairman Jesse Berst. “We are so pleased that we can showcase some of these pioneering companies and their inspired efforts to promote more livable, workable and sustainable communities.”

Small towns can be smart cities too

“Seat Pleasant is a small community outside Washington, D.C. But we believe we are just as important and significant as any community in the world,” Mayor Edward W. Grant said as he announced a partnership with IBM to launch an Intelligent Operations Center and other innovative technologies in his town of 5,000. “Our desire is to engage with our citizens so they can be engaged with their government – the government they pay for,” the mayor added.

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CONFERENCE HIGHLIGHTS

How will AI transform cities? Three experts weigh in

As artificial intelligence (AI) evolves, it could radically shape the way that cities provide services and determine policy. Three experts talked about

breakthroughs in AI and shared their visions of what they could mean for cities. The visions are inspiring. If they come to life, tomorrow’s cities will have a new tool to make life easier for residents and to prevent unintended consequences from policy decisions.

Three steps to implementing smart analytics in your city

To make a city smart, you must get smart about using data. We gathered three data experts who offered great advice to help cities understand what

their data is telling them and how to share that message with others. It’s easy to be overwhelmed by it, but Thomas Beyer, principal at Deloitte, said the first lesson is that you don’t need to look at every piece of data. Before you do any analytics, understand what your objective is. Don’t get distracted by things that don’t relate to your objective. Sari Ladin, who develops analytics and data strategy for the city of Los Angeles, suggested the best use of data is to tell a story – a story that matters to your residents and the people serving them.

How do we get people out of their cars – and into shared transportation?

For Tina Quigley, general manager for the Regional Transportation Commission of Southern Nevada, four of the top issues for her agency are autonomous vehicles, intelligent infrastructure, connected vehicles and shared mobility. And all of those elements are part of an integrated transportation system that includes multi-modal mass transit, high-speed rail – and they all ideally work seamlessly together. But as she and other panelists warned: At the rate we’re going now, the technology will be here before the policy that regulates it has been created.

Suffering in Silicon Valley – and how homeless advocates are trying to end it

Karen Addato’s brother died homeless – a John Doe in the county coroner’s office. “My brother’s experience has ignited something within me that is unstoppable,” said Addato, Executive Director of Hi-Tech Rover, a nonprofit dedicated to using technology to help Santa Clara County’s homeless find jobs, housing and better lives. She spoke during a panel of experts on homelessness who highlighted replicable technology solutions that are reducing suffering in Silicon Valley and beyond.

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CONFERENCE HIGHLIGHTS

Readiness Challenge Grants: Insider tips from grant winners revealed

The Council will launch its 2018 Smart Cities Readiness Challenge Grant competition at its October Smart Cities Week conference in Washington, D.C. What can your city learn from the 2017 winners? Representatives from Austin, Indianapolis, Miami, Orlando and Philadelphia shared some of the lessons they’ve learned about driving smart city initiatives during a well-attended session in Santa Clara.

What’s next for smart cities? Four leaders share insights

What will tomorrow’s smart cities look like? Four leaders of enterprising cities shared valuable advice – from stamping out “zombie” technologies to building regional coalitions to having a smart cities point person to insisting on a solid data backbone. Don’t miss what else representatives of Philadelphia, Seattle, San Jose and San Leandro shared about what tomorrow’s cities will look like and how to get there.

Self-driving cars are coming. What do we do now?

Cities need to be prepared to accommodate the next generation of connected and autonomous vehicles and support them with the technological and other infrastructure they’ll need (think road modifications, signage and marking, communications and more). Transportation experts shared insights on the challenges ahead. But there are benefits on the way too. As Doug Johnson, principal transportation planner for the Bay Area Metropolitan Transportation Commission, put it: “New vehicle technology does present opportunities to remedy problems caused by private vehicles… such as traffic congestion, accidents and deaths, diminished air quality.”

DOE awards: Building on smart energy analytics

Energy efficiency is a major concern for many cities and buildings are a great place to start, since about 40% of all the energy consumed is used to power buildings. And cutting energy use is easier than you might think. Five leaders in the commercial building sector were honored by the Department of Energy’s Better Buildings campaign during Smart Cities Week Silicon Valley. Find out which buildings were recognized – and why.

And finally: Scenes from the exhibition hall

The exhibit hall was buzzing during Smart Cities Week Silicon Valley as leading technology companies displayed solutions and services that will drive the next generation of smart cities.

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Delivering Urban Insights to Smart CitiesHitachi brings smart cities to reality with IoT solutions that help cities and organizations become safer and smarter, so they can thrive. We bring everything from trains and smart water systems to advanced analytics, data integration and visualization that helps cities, airports, transportation agencies, campuses, utilities, and retail districts.

Come see us at booth #107 to find out how you can:• Improve public safety• Achieve operational excellence• Enhance public and customer services• Generate new insights about people, places, and traffic that help your city thrive• Access these solutions as a service

www.HitachiInsightGroup.com

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GovTechHow Tech-Enhanced Infrastructure Will Promote Equity in Transportation

GovTechFirst Steps for Cities in Harnessing the Value of Untapped Data

StateScoopSmart city pilots present a prime opportunity for federal funding, congresswoman says

StateScoopHow self-driving vehicles will transform

the transit business model

TransportiCAOpening Thoughts for the Smart Cities Week - Silicon Valley

Conference (09-10 May)

YouTubeSeat Pleasant at the Smart Cities Week Conference

Smart Cities WorldTrailblazing start-ups awarded

HortonworksThree Things I Learned at Yesterday’s Smart Cities Conference in Silicon Valley

Industrial IoTKey Takeaway from Smart Cities Week: Has Govtech’s Outdated Policies and Extended Procurement Cycle Actually Been a Good Thing?

Security WorldNew Ideas, Big Ideas, Smart Ideas Emerge At Smart Cities Week Silicon Valley

READ THE EXPERT INTERVIEWS

Smart Cities Week gained a lot of attention in the press. See below for a snapshot.

Hear from the leading smart technologists!

Bryan WitkowskiLeading IoT Product Strategy, machineQ at Comcast

FOR MORE MEDIA COVERAGE, CLICK HERE.

Rana SenUS Public Sector Smart City Leader, Deloitte

Ravi ChalakaVP, Global IoT Marketing, Hitachi Insight Group

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www.fybr-tech.com

We turn raw data from real-world devices into insightful information – improving communities and creating better places to live and work. By monitoring activities like parking occupancy, storm sewer levels, block-level weather and street lighting, Fybr can make your city smarter – quickly and cost effectively.

INSIGHTFUL DATA LEADS TO ENDLESS POSSIBILITIES.

Full City Intelligence.One Platform.

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SPONSORS

www.smartcitiesweek.com#SCWSV Produced by:

EXHIBITORS

INNOVATION ALLEY SPONSORS

BRONZE SPONSORS

SILVER SPONSOR

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