What is an urban operating system?
This article is also available here in Spanish.

What is an urban operating system?

My list

Author | M. Martínez Euklidiadas

An urban operating system (urban OS) is a set of hardware, software and data that enables a city to be organized through urban planning diagrams. All this information helps with the real-time management of cities and, particularly, future planning.

How has urban planning changed?

For centuries, urban planning was a purely military subject: the city was organized in accordance with possible invasions and defensive capacity, or based on well-known urban pacification techniques. The aim was to improve the efficiency of the authorities, a strategy adopted by American developers by introducing defense strategies into their models.

In the years following World War II, during the first IT expansion, terms such as ‘battle ground’, ‘fight against poverty’ or ‘combat urban chaos’ were often added; all terms that are reminiscent of Haussmann’s hygiene ideals in his architectural planning in 14th century Paris, but this time using continuously evolving computer systems.

It was some time before the algorithmic biases of this type of approach was fully understood, hence the need to include a holistic vision in the models. That is, one that incorporated all types of data into the urban planning equation. Since then, urban planning has developed a broader approach that includes many more parameters.

What is an urban operating system?

The urban operating system or urban OS emerged as an urban planning diagram designed to transform a city into a smart city through the application of information technology. A form of control for the layered architecture deployed in cities at the end of the 19th century. A simplified flow diagram that was useful for urban managers.

The world ’emerged’ is key, since it stemmed from the initial urban management systems, those containing data islands characterized by joining together data in a way that prevented relationships between categories from being determined. Population aging, for example, was disconnected from planning in the area of biodiversity.

This operating system provides a series of techniques and capacities to combine urban infrastructures, urban services and the everyday lives of residents and acts as a base not just to manage the town’s day-to-day activities, but also for planning long-term initiatives. Future planning is only possible when a city’s current situation is known.

According to the researchers Osborne and Rose in their paper ‘Governing cities’, "these [urban design] flows are operative rationales" where "each diagram depicts and projects a certain ‘truth’ of the city". The diagrams are intended to contain (and mold, not always intentionally) the relationships of power, ethics and citizenship.

Or others such as urban planning and allergies. As indicated in ‘Urban Operating Systems’ (2020), we are witnessing the creation of the computational city, which stems from the informational city. Data now form the basis on which the city is able to ‘think’. Perhaps one day cities will even make decisions or submit proposals.

What are the different sectors in urban diagrams?

For decades, the traditional sectors for monitoring a smart city from an IT perspective have been the economy, government management, citizens, the environment, quality of life and mobility; although more recent approaches such as those of IESE Cities in Motion have opened up the spectrum to other dimensions:

  • Human capital
  • Social cohesion
  • Economy
  • Governance
  • Environment
  • Mobility and transport
  • Urban planning
  • Global exposure
  • Technology

All these metrics themselves contain hundreds if not thousands of parameters, all connected and coordinated via instances enabling relationships to be established, for example, between investment in public transport and social cohesion, or others.

Images | Claudio Schwarz

Related content

Recommended profiles for you

FB
Flavio Bono
European Commission
Team Leader
JC
Jorge Conejero Alberzoni
Lenovo
EL
Elisabeth Lasky
Freelance
Designing more inclusive, open, attractive events that make that heart of the European Project shine
LR
Liliya Remezova
Telefonica
Telefónica IoT - Global Managed Connectivity selling Global Solutions
RM
Randeep Kapur Mr.
Dell Technologies
MH
Mohammed Hassan
Ro
Chief Specialist
SL
Saul Pablo Labajo Izquierdo
NaevaTec (Tikal Technologies S.L.)
CEO
MM
Matthieu Merchadou Merchadou
Smart Florida
Founder and Executive Director
MG
MANUEL GUERRIS
NEO CONSULTING BCN
CEO
HH
Hans Hauska
KTH
Assoc Prof
KL
Kimberly LaGrue
City of New Orleans
CIO/IT Director
KS
Kamelia S
The Change Shift
Managing Director
JS
João Silva
ISEC / IPC
DP
David Padilla Gadea
Ayuntamiento de las Rozas de Madrid
Smart Cities Solutions
DP
Donovan Robertson Prof.
CCSI Group
SM
Sugianto M
Maestro
Director
PB
Pere Botella
UPC School - UPC Barcelona Tech
IT Academic Advisor/ Director of postgraduate activities
TM
Tatsuya Kitamura Mr.
NIKKEI /Smart City Institute Japan
JZ
Juan Pablo Zalazar
UNNE
Professor
GY
German Yanez Marquez
Savinvest
Corporate Auditor

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.