Digital Cities of the 21th Century

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Category : Smart City

Talks will go on with Tecom

Kerala Chief Minister V S Achuthanandan today said the government has not terminated negotiations with Dubai-based Tecom for developing SmartCity IT park at Kochi and it will consider alternative partnership only as the last resort. His statement, made in the state Assembly, came close on the heels of Tecom officials’ announcement during SmartCity board meeting at Kochi yesterday that the company would not shy away from a legal battle if the government went to court for arbitration. Replying to questions on the long-dragging project, Achuthanandan said negotiations with Tecom were still on and the question of going for an alternative partner would arise only as a last option.

However, he added that there was no question of yielding to the Dubai company’s demands such as “free-hold” right for part of the land since they were outside the original agreement. Since the LDF Government came to power, projects worth Rs 10,000 crore have been initiated out of which Rs 2000 crore was direct government investment, he said. In the last four years, the IT sector boom in Kerala has been three times higher than the national average. The state maintained the growth trend even during the global recession, he added.

A board of directors meeting of the proposed Rs.1,500 crore Smart City Kochi concluded here Monday without taking any decision on the fate of the IT project. At the same time, the developer Smart City Dubai said it has no plans to pull out from the project. Speaking to reporters here after the meeting, Smart City Dubai chief executive Fareed Abdul Rehman said: “Some more discussions have to take place because certain issues have to be resolved. We are not asking for anything new but just want those things that have been already written in the agreement and we have not asked anything new.” He also invited the Chief Secretary of the state to visit their office in Dubai and to see what they are doing there. Smart City Dubai is sticking to the agreement where it has been mentioned that they would get 12 per cent freehold rights (around 30 acres from the 246 acres).

The Kerala government is adamant that it will not allow any real estate dealing and it is on this that the project is hanging fire. Interestingly, State Fisheries Minister and Smart City Kochi Chairman S. Sarma did not attend the meeting. And for the first time there were protests at the venue of the meeting. Members of the youth organisation of the ruling Left Democratic Front and the Revolutionary Socialist Party shouted slogans asking the state government to impelement the project.

Asia means Cleaner and Greener Cities

For the first time in human history, there are more people living in urban environments than in rural ones. This monumental demographic shift has come as cities in growing nations are growing at a breakneck pace, and not always with an eye toward efficiency and sustainability. Environmentally, these quickly expanding cities can prove problematic, to say the least, generating massive waste management difficulties, air quality problems and traffic.


The New Songdo International Business District in Inchon, South Korea, will feature mass transit, a self-watering park and a centralized pneumatic waste-disposal system. Gale envisions New Songdo as a business hub and a “smart and sustainable city,” featuring extensive public transportation, open space, water management and a centralized pneumatic waste-disposal system. Every building in the city will be certified by Leadership in Energy and Environmental Design (LEED) for energy efficiency.


Of course, New Songdo is far from the first city to make almost-utopian promises about building the great city of tomorrow. Its designers say they hope to learn from the mistakes of other planned cities like Brazil’s Brasilia to answer the complex challenge of building a city that didn’t evolve organically but still feels human and livable. According to Murcott, Gale has already entertained more than 40 offers from Chinese municipalities that are hoping for developments similar to New Songdo in their own areas, and the company has plans for several new projects throughout the country. One project in Meixi Lake will feature a five-mile-long network of urban farms.

Cisco Systems build a city in a box

It’s a product like no other — a complete city for a million people. As tens of millions of people across the developing world migrate from the countryside to new cities, Cisco Systems Inc. is helping build a prototype here for what one developer describes as an instant “city in a box.” Cisco is wiring every tech nook and cranny of the new city, making it one of the most technologically sophisticated urban centers on the planet. Delegations of Chinese government officials looking to buy their own cities of the future are descending on New Songdo City, a soon-to-be-completed metropolis about the size of downtown Boston that serves as a showroom model for what is expected to be the first of many assembly-line cities. In addition to state-of-the-art information technology, Songdo will emit just one-third of the greenhouse gases of a typical city of similar size.

Cities of a million-plus population are popping up across the developing world, but the foremost market for the prototype here is China, where a massive demographic shift from rural to urban already is underway, requiring hundreds of new cities. The potential is so big that executives at Cisco, the key tech partner for the development, get giddy talking about what could be a $30-billion business over coming years for the San Jose networking giant. Just a year ago, the usually buttoned-down Cisco Chief Executive John Chambers engaged in a night of “love shots” — locked-elbow drinking toasts — with South Korean President Lee Myung-bak to seal the Songdo deal Korean-style. It’s easy to see why Cisco is intoxicated with the possibilities: According to a study by investment bank CIBC World Markets, governments are expected to spend $35 trillion on public works projects during the next 20 years. In Songdo alone, Cisco sold 20,000 units of its advanced video-conferencing system called Telepresence — a billion-dollar order — almost before the ink had dried on the contract, said developer Stan Gale, the chief visionary of the project.

Dubbed Smart City

To provide better living conditions for the foreign workforce in the international business district, the Incheon metropolitan government introduced a new concept for the city, dubbed Smart City, to Songdo. Under the plan, the city is building an urban space that has it all for its dwellers. All activities of residents will take place within a five-minute drive. The local government elaborated that the new concept of the city is appealing and creative to experts, companies and institutions and its pleasant living and working environment creating added value. In addition to city dwellers, the target clients of the Smart City also include tourists or visitors who plan to ome for leisure and sightseeing.

Officials of the IFEZ believe that such upscale infrastructure will make it a lot easier for them to attract professionals, researchers, academics and students to come there to work, live and lead a quality life. In addition to universities, they aim to attract global and local businesses, world-class research institutes, hospitals and international organizations in the business district. Several zones with different purposes have been set aside in the brand new city. They include the bio and medical clusters, education and research facilities, the global business sector, and leisure and tourism clusters. With the state-of-the-art facilities, Songdo seeks to position itself as the Northeast Asian hub for international business when construction ends in 2020.

Buildings and Cities are becoming smarter

echnology firms like Cisco, IBM, Microsoft and Google, besides research institutes, are helping make cities more responsive to the needs and desires of inhabitants. The 250,000 citizens of Songdo, a business district which borders the Yellow Sea in Incheon, a free economic zone in South Korea, are seeing hectic activity.

Every nook and corner is being wired. The idea is to have everything connected — buildings, cars and even energy grids. Networking technology from Cisco is being embedded into buildings, and every home, school and government agency is being equipped with telepresence video technology. Cisco, which is helping build a prototype of an ‘intelligent city’ here, has sold 20,000 units of telepresence — its advanced videoconferencing system. Much of Songdo will have been wired by 2014. Cisco and New York City-based Gale International hope the $35 billion Songdo project will soon lead to similar developments in China, India [ Images ], Vietnam and other countries.

Smart City controversy refuses to die down

THIRUVANANTHAPURAM: After days of silence, the Smart City Kochi project has once again become a subject for argument and counter argument between the State Government and TECOM. At a press conference held in connection with the fourth anniversary of the LDF Government here on Tuesday, Chief Minister V.S.Achuthanandan said that Tecom was deliberately delaying the Smart City project owing to their financial constraints.

“Tecom is under severe financial crunch in the wake of the global recession. Hence, they are trying to delay the project by sticking to a condition that was not in the initial agreement. The State Government was patiently waiting since the project was mooted by a company from a country with which we have friendly relations,’’ Achuthanandan said. He also added that if the delay in materialising the project continued, the State Government would itself implement the project.

Tecom, the promoters of Smartcity Kochi project, has asked the govt to stick to the framework agreement and the freehold rights. They also reiterated that the company is keen to go ahead with the project, the agreement for which was signed on May 13, 2007 with the Kerala govt. The letter was in reply to the state government’s letter. The State Government had earlier asked Tecom whether it had any intention to go ahead with the project in Kochi.

SCM Construction Progress

Major construction works at the SmartCity Malta site are swiftly moving ahead as the main structure of SCM01 is being carried out. In conjunction with this, the boulevard leading to SCM01 is also being contoured. The site-wide grading plan ensures the comfort of future SmartCity Malta business partners, by isolating construction work away from completed project phases. In this way noise and dust pollution is greatly reduced and health and safety measures are met.

The first phase of SmartCity Malta will be inaugurated later this year.

Tecom Kerala City

TECOM makes it clear that it has intimated Govt of Kerala that its intention is not to sell the freehold land long ago. Moreover, freehold is sought for the Indian company Smart City Kochi with Minister S. Sarma as its chairman, and not for Tecom.

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A medical City in Kochi

In between all the unclear and doubtful talks on smart city, a ray of hope for another development project in Kerala. This is the Medical city is from D.M health care group. The group is having plans of establishing various medical firms throughout Kerala. The Medical city at Cochin will be a 500 crore project. The group is having plans of investing 800 crores in the Medical field of India. Along with the medical city Cochin the group will establish a medical college at Wayanad. The new plans were announced by the chairman of the group Dr. Asad Muppan.

The Medical city will be constructed in 35 acres of land. The project will be constructed in 2 phases. In the initial stage hospital with 500 beds, convention centre, Hotel facility for Guests and relatives of patients, accommodation facility for doctors and staff will be constructed. In the second stage expert facilities for specialized branched will be established. This includes modern treatment facilities for specialties as eye, heart and cancer. The group is also conducting several social service activities in the medical field.