From i-waterfront to i-canada. The Role of Intelligent Communities in Canada's Digital Opportunity

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From i-waterfront to i-canada The Role of Intelligent Communities in Canada's Digital Opportunity 2015 Hutchison Management International Inc. All Rights Reserved April 29, 2015

From Automation to Smart/Intelligent Communities: Adding Strategic Alignment Smart City 1.0 Focus: Automating the Functions Smart/Intelligent Community 2.0 Focus: Coordinated/Connected Strategy Traffic Healthcare Community Information Government services Education Ecology Traffic Education Community Information Social Services Social services Retail Government services Healthcare Ecology 2015 Hutchison Management International Inc.: All rights Reserved

Welcome to Waterfront Toronto

This $34 Billion 2000 acre urban revitalization project is one of the world s largest: Located adjacent to North America s fastest growing large urban region

Designated Waterfront Area

HOW BIG IS THIS PROJECT? The largest urban redevelopment project in North America One of the largest waterfront revitalization initiatives in the world 800 hectares roughly the size of Toronto s major downtown core from Bathurst Street to Sherbourne Street and Front Street to Bloor Street 25 years to full build out $1.5 billion government investment $34 billion investment $4.3 billion in public infrastructure 40,000 new residences

Waterfront Toronto, Canada Canary Wharf London, U.K. Battery Park, New York City

East Bayfront Before 22 hectares (55 acres) East Bayfront The Future 14 Acres of parks and public realm 6000 residential units; 1200 affordable rental units 8,500 jobs in clean tech and digital media clusters

West Don Lands Before 32 hectares (80 acre) West Don Lands The Future 32 hectares (80 acre) 23 acres of parks and public spaces 6,000 residential housing units, including 1,200 affordable 750,000 sq ft commercial

Lower Don Lands Present +120 hectares (+300 Acres) Lower Don Lands Future +120 hectares (+300 Acres) One of 16 zero emission Clinton Climate Initiative C-40 Cities projects 24,000 knowledge jobs 28,000 homes Lower Don Lands - Present

i-waterfront: The 21st Century Intelligent Community ENVIRONMENT ECONOMIC Innovation Opportunities SOCIAL

i-waterfront: The 21st Century Intelligent Community Sustainability: LEED Gold District Energy Transit First Intelligent Community Ultra broadband Infrastructure: 100mb/s to +10 gb/s Focus on Knowledge and Creative Industries Open Access Ultra Broadband Content Opportunities On-line Library Royal Ontario Museum in your home On-line Wellness Centre Collaborative Research Advanced Elementary Schools Creative On-Line Communities On-line Business Incubation Global Teleworking Intelligent Buildings

The i-waterfront INNOVATION CENTRE : Merging the Green and Knowledge Economies Residential Developers Commercial Developers District Energy i-transit CISCO LEED Gold Clean i-technology Residents & Employees Digital Media/Film/ Animation FilmPort Corus Entertainment Sheridan College Ryerson Artscape George Brown IBM George Brown College Toronto Hospital Next Gen Community Wellness Centre University Health Net Community Wellness 120,000 New Residents 40,000 New jobs

i-coa : i-community Open Architecture Model 2014 Hutchison Management International Inc.: All rights Reserved

i CANADA 150

How are we doing? The i-canada Assessment System: Domains (5) Place Infrastructure Collaboration Solutions Life Areas (26) Living Play & Culture Working Learning Safety & Health Social Cohesion e-arts e-education e-health e-business. e-community e-government Know. Workforce Mkt. Connect. Entrepreneurship Innovation Involvement Utilities Mobile Broadband Comm. Assets Finance Transport Urbanism Environment Governance Dimensions (76) Factors (over 360) & Indicators (over 1200) Staff Perspectives Global City Indicators Facility (Toronto)

Assessment Example of Two Foreign Cities Mid-City (Agric) France Nicely established place Little drive for change Established comfortable life Life Working Safety & Health Play & Culture Learning Social Cohesion Living e-arts e-education e-health e-business e-community e-government xs Knowledge Workforce Market Connectivity Entrepreneurship Innovation Community Involvement Utilities Governance Mobile Broadband Transport Comm. Assets Finance Environment Large City (Suburb) Mexico Urbanism Poor place & infrastructure Low governance & involvement City is trying to connect Terrible life conditions

Aggregate feedback of the importance and present state standing of twenty-seven Smart City indictors based on collaborative workshops with seventy public and private sector city leaders. The results provide a base-line for envisioning Our Future City and creating Action Plans to achieve prestigious high level global Smart City rankings. Weighted average score based on assessment by 5 target groups: Youth, Civic Alliances, Large Business, SMEs and Public Officials 20,0 19,5 Bad Very good 19,0 18,5 Very important Knowledge workforce Safety&Health Working Very important 18,0 Transport Living Importance 17,5 17,0 16,5 16,0 15,5 15,0 14,5 14,0 Less important Environment E-Health E-Education Entrepreneurship E-Community Innovation Mobile Collaboration Urbanism Governance E-Government Broadband Play&Culture E-Business Learning Utilities Finance Community assets Social Cohesion Digital Inclusion Marketing and Advocacy Less important 13,5 Bad E-Art Very good 13,0 1,0 1,5 2,0 2,5 3,0 Assessment 3,5 4,0 4,5 How Smart is Your Smart City? Showing Actual Assessment and Importance by City Leaders 5,0

Smart Applications on Virtual Infrastructures Global Environment for Network Innovations WORLD FUTURE CITIES SUMMIT Toronto s annual summit of global summits Six top Smart City conferences: Canada + Europe How To transform for social, economic, political and technology challenges Mayors, business leaders, researchers Municipal Information Systems Association Next-generation Internet Applications for America 13-15 October, 2015 PRACTICAL GET-IT-DONE INFORMATION How to Lessons learned from Future Cities Innovative policies that drive growth New tool for community evolution How Small and Medium Cities can start Funding: New sources Government: U.S. IGNITE Merging new technologies INTRODUCING: The SUCCESS LADDER AWARDS GALA Community iperformance Awards! 50 awards to best community apps & services TOTAL SUBJECT COVERAGE Smart Health Smart Energy Smart Transportation Social and Business Innovation Sustainable Development Harvesting Analytics How to advance your Community with a Progress map and guide FEATURING Mayors from Europe, Asia, America India s Smart 100 Cities Program New Global Smart City Research Financing

Thank You Bill Hutchison: www.hutchison-mangagement.com p.20