Can parks be smart? These are the key aspects that define a Smart Park
This article is also available here in Spanish.

Can parks be smart? These are the key aspects that define a Smart Park

My list

Author | Patricia LicerasPublic parks are an intrinsic part of urban life. However, while technology today is changing practically every aspect of our lives, it is hardly being used in the design of these green areas which, apart from providing services for citizens, absorb CO2 and act as screens against noise and pollution.In order to make progress in this regard, the UCLA Luskin Centre for innovation, which seeks to resolve today’s environmental challenges, has launched SMART Parks, a collection of new technologies for park designers to implement in these spaces.

A series of solutions

SMART Parks offers a whole host of solutions, some of which are already being applied, including solutions relating to irrigation or rainwater, or even park furniture and lighting.One of these is the installation of smart irrigation systems or the use of robotic lawnmowers, saving time and money in grass-cuttingThere are also digital solutions with great potential. Today, game-based interactive structures with customisable software can be designed, offering different entertainment solutions for children based on language and culture, maximising the experience. Tools that may also be used by children with physical or mental disabilities, as indicated by researchers at the UCLA Luskin Centre.SMART Parks is also committed to designing exercise machines which, while improving the health of users, produce clean energy to charge mobile phones. It also proposes smart lighting, with trails that light up in the dark for increased security and safety in parks, while also increasing the number of visitors.The SMART Parks solutions also include the use of self-healing cement-based materials to reduce maintenance requirements, as well as photocatalytic coatings based on titanium dioxide that sterilise surfaces, which requires less water and less aggressive chemical products to clean them.

Innovative examples paving the way

Some examples of smart green areas are the famous skatepark in the Danish city of Roskilde which, when it is dry, is a really fun skateboarding area. Its drainage system also enables it to fill up like a rainwater tank in times of flooding. Or the Soofa benches, first installed in Boston in 2014 and which are now present in over 65 cities in the United States and other cities around the world.These solar-powered benches allow mobiles to be charged and include sensors to collect data about how many people use the parks in which they are located. This makes it easier to schedule activities adapted to the visitors based on the number of visits, such as aerobic exercises or tai chi classes.

A new member of the “smart” category

SMART Parks not only provides a series of tools to redesign parks, but also guidance for implementing these improvements and also for establishing potential public-private collaborations to do so, together with financing strategies.In 2050, 68% of the world’s population will live in cities, compared with the current 55%, according to the UN, and parks will play an important role. In this flourishing world of technology that includes phones and televisions or thermostats and voice-command domestic assistants, with initiatives like SMART Parks, we can now talk about smart green spaces. And with a laudable purpose: to increase environmental sustainability and public enjoyment of more efficient parks.Images | Unsplash

Related content

Recommended profiles for you

VA
Vanheule Alexandre
Tractebel ENGIE
Business Development Director
OM
Ouanaya Mohamed
SAPT
JP
Javier Pihn
Fusion For Energy
VR
Vrao R
Enrcon
Head of the company
JP
Jenny Pizarro
Cushman & Wakefield
International Partner, Head of Business Development Services in South Europe
JS
Julia Saklakova
MIPU
International Business Development Manager
JR
Júlia Rubert Tayà
Departament de Territori
DH
Diana Hernandez
Estudio Tlaxcala
Architectural firm using local building systems in current architecture, urban solutions
SA
satria a
brawijaya university
student
DT
Damian Tabakman
CEDU
President
MR
Mario Riontino
Celantur GmbH
Chief Operating Officer
EC
Edna Castillo
Olimpia
Product Development Director
RA
Rubén Albornoz
Fundalúmina
Dirección General
NL
Nelson Laguna
TRISA
TI Manager
SO
Sophia Olivas Olivas
EverSmart City
MM
Muhamad Meiza Jolanda Meiza
MITI
Staff
SB
Sergi Bahi
Universitat Politecnica de Catalunya
AB
Aibek Boranbayev
Virtuous Cities
AR
Ann Rönnerbäck
Rönnerback Communications
RG
rohyani gofar
IMT Mitra Solusi
director

Are we building the cities we really need?

Explore Cartography of Our Urban Future —a bold rethink of ‘smart’ cities and what we must change by 2030.