Smart, in India, is the new way of being. From phones, TVs, cars, homes and now cities, everything is going the ‘smart’ way. However, the smart city isn’t a new concept, especially in the West. In cities like Los Angeles, Information and Communications Technology-based (ICT) data capture and analysis has improved the efficiency of services and planning since the 1960s.
It is now clear that the Indian smart cities are not all about data, information and intelligence, but rather in the absence of a comprehensive urbanisation policy, a continuation of the legacy of ad-hoc urban programming of subsequent governments.
The previous UPA government set the ball rolling with the JNNURM for creating world-class infrastructure, redeveloping slums and ushering in a culture of planned urban development along with governance reforms within urban local bodies.
Guidelines For A Smart City
Post 2014, the NDA government continued the ad-hoc urban programming approach primarily through four city-based projects including the Smart Cities Mission.
The Smart Cities Mission addresses the urbanisation challenges through a two-pronged approach: area based development through improvement (retrofitting a minimum 500 acres) or city renewal (redevelopment of minimum 50 acres) or city extension (greenfield development of minimum 250 acres) and a pan-city initiative in which smart solutions (mainly ICT based) are applied covering larger parts of the city and existing city-wide infrastructure.
The government’s Smart City guidelines specify certain key features defining the character of smart urban development:
- Promoting
mixed land use in area-based developments
- Housing
and inclusiveness – expand housing opportunities for all
- Creating
walkable localities
- Preserving
and developing open spaces
- Promoting
a variety of transport options – Transit Oriented Development (TOD), public
transport and last mile para-transport connectivity
- Making
governance citizen-friendly and cost effective – increasing online services and using mobile phones to bring about accountability and transparency
- Giving
an identity to the city
- Applying
Smart Solutions to infrastructure and services in area-based development in
order to make them better
How Innovative Are Smart City Proposals?
- Instead of an out-of-the-box
idea, smart city project seems to be a continuation of the previous urbanisation
policies such as the JNNURM.
- Among the cities chosen for the
project, design proposals lack vision and innovation.
- A positive aspect of the smart
city principles is the inclusion of concepts of ‘New Urbanism’ that are closely
linked to the liveability quotient of cities.
- Redevelopment in many cities
with the help of private developers is laudable but also raises the issue of
safety of women and children.
Design Proposals
The fact that less points are given to vision and innovation than to impact, implementation, cost-effectiveness and stakeholder engagement etc, is perhaps the reason why some high ranking cities have very average design proposals whereas some low-ranking cities have smarter ideas. However, most cities hope to become liveable, walkable, transit-oriented, healthy, climate resilient, and smarter in some aspect of service delivery through ICT applications.
Few cities though were able to adapt these global ideas to their particular reality in a consistent manner. Ludhiana and Jaipur are notable exceptions as they used their existing infrastructure to anchor the other ideas.
Ludhiana being India’s largest cycle manufacturing hub wants to be the most bicycle friendly city in India and has constructed the narrative of healthy and active living, consciously providing for non-motorised transport and walkable and cyclable public realms around that. Jaipur played to its heritage city strength and sought to improve parts of the walled city through smart mobility to enhance its tourism potential.
Principles of ‘New Urbanism’
In contrast, the lack of internal consistency in translating the core smartening strategy in the top ranking city Bhubaneswar, “creating a model of sustainable urbanisation based on New Urbanism principles” is surprising, as New Urbanism finds no mention in the city’s visions and goals, and no explanation is given as to how these concepts are translated to shape the area based development and smart urban form.
It is important to point out that New Urbanism concepts, such as creating walkable, mixed-use, dense well-designed neighbourhoods with a strong identity, are strongly embedded in the Smart City principles. And other cities like Kochi provided detailed implementable urban design guidelines in the spirit of New Urbanism.
In the United
States, New Urbanist neighbourhoods, though quite popular, are hard to
implement as they often require zoning changes.
A simple land-use change sometimes takes years to get approved in India. Seeking approval for form-based development controls for certain plots to achieve some desirable urban form may prove to be a Herculean challenge.
What Makes A City Smart?
In many cities the area-based development is significantly about redevelopment, with the help of private developers, targeting old market areas and slums (Surat, Ahmedabad etc), or riverfronts (Vizag, Pune, Guwahati etc). This is inevitable as the government funding of smart cities (Rs. 500 crore for five years each from central and state governments) is inadequate, to say the least.
The government itself realises this and cites the Bhendi Bazaar redevelopment project, in the heart of Mumbai, by a private trust. It is worth pointing out that Bhendi Bazaar is the only place in India, predominated by the Dawoodi Bohra community, where female genital mutilation is still practiced. In the context of the newly forged Sustainable Development Goals, isn’t the promise of the Smart City also to keep women and children safe and end all forms of violence against them?
As only 10% weightage is given to the “smartness” of proposals in the evaluation process, ideas such as skywalks in Surat; happiness areas for the cultural and social needs of citizens and transparent garbage bins for safety in Delhi; ‘she lounges’ in Bhopal which are really free and clean public toilets for women with seating, Wi-Fi, FM, ATM and a novelty shop, are vying to outsmart each other. But importantly are these what make cities smart?
Moreover, the visuals submitted by cities comprise of bland reference images from international
cities or similar looking Sketch-up
modeled urban visions, which beg to ask, what about the important goal of the identity of a city? If cities manage to implement some of the core
liveability ideas in parts of the city, there will definitely be some improvement
in the quality of urban space for some. However, borrowing from Mark Vallianatos, could this form of smart urbanism help narrow the
growing gap between society’s 1s and 0s? That’s
a discussion for another day.
Also read: Smart City or Gas Chamber? Building India Under a Layer of Smoke
(Sudeshna Chatterjee is an urbanist working on making cities inclusive, safe, climate resilient and friendly for children and young people.)
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