Smart Connected Communities Lisa A. Brown October 2018 What is - - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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Smart Connected Communities Lisa A. Brown October 2018 What is - - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

Smart Connected Communities Lisa A. Brown October 2018 What is driving the Smart City? Efficiency in a time Urbanization of funding cuts Sustainability: reducing Economic emissions & consumption development Resiliency amidst the


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Smart Connected Communities

Lisa A. Brown

October 2018

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What is driving the Smart City?

Sustainability: reducing emissions & consumption Economic development Resiliency amidst the impacts of climate change Efficiency in a time

  • f funding cuts

Proliferation of IoT and connected devices Urbanization

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Smart Technologies:

Enabling Government to be More Efficient & Create a Thriving Brand

Preserving resources through your parks Optimizing refuse processes Transit/traffic driving economic prosperity?

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Innovative Cities:

Using Data & Tech to Improve Competitiveness & Livability

Are you monetizing your vertical assets?

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Securing Connected Cities:

Smarter Policing & Surveillance through Technology & Data

Deter/prevent crime Data management personnel Public safety resources alignment Web-based services

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Smart Meters and Network:

“Sensing the World”

Concerned about water resources? Attracting businesses & millennials? Affordability holding your city back?

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End Game:

Better Decision Making & Improved Quality of Life for all Residents

Smart Parking Your Plan

  • f Action

Physical Infrastructure Community Focus Your Brand Matters

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How to Start:

Effectively Delivering Services, Using Resources & Supporting the Economy

Vision Ecosystem Governance Technology Enablers Funding

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City of Jacksonville Beach, FL

Smart Utilities Upgrade Program

UPGRADES

  • 10,500 Intelligent Water Meters
  • 150 Intelligent Natural Gas Meters
  • Area-Wide Automated Metering

Infrastructure

  • Infrastructure and Safety

Modernization Program

  • Mobile Leak Detection System

PROJECT VALUE $6.5 million ANNUAL SAVINGS ~$500,000 PAYBACK 14 Years

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City of Evansville, IN

City-Wide Modernization

UPGRADES

  • Lighting, HVAC, Controls
  • Valve Automation
  • Methane biogas systems
  • Automated Meter Infrastructure

(AMI) PROJECT VALUE $39 million ANNUAL SAVINGS $3.1 million PAYBACK 20 Years

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City of El Paso, TX

Street Lighting Program

UPGRADES

  • 18,800 new LED street lights
  • Wireless ROAM street light control

system

  • GPS street light inventory software
  • 6,600 new LED traffic signals
  • 6 Major Phases of Work, City-Wide

PROJECT VALUE $42 million ANNUAL SAVINGS $19.4 million PAYBACK 10-20 Years

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Johnson Controls Hall of Fame Village

Creating the first sports and entertainment “smart city”

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Johnson Controls Hall of Fame Village

2015 2016 2017 2018 2019 2020 DATA CENTERS SECURITY INDUSTRIAL EDUCATION HOUSING HEALTHCARE RETAIL HOSPITALITY RESIDENTIAL STADIUMS GOVERNMENT

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Johnson Controls Hall of Fame Village

CONTROLS HVAC EQUIPMENT SECURITY FIRE & HAZARD PROTECTION BUILDING SERVICES & PARTS LIGHTING, CONTROL & RETROFIT OPERATIONAL INTELLIGENCE & LOSS PREVENTION ENERGY STORAGE RETAIL SYSTEMS BUILDING WIDE SYSTEMS INTEGRATION SPECIALTY SERVICES –

WIRELESS, AUDIO / VISUAL, DATA

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Life is better in a smart city

It’s safer, greener, less congested, cleaner, and more cost- and energy-efficient. From the streets to municipal services, it is easier to navigate. It’s about collecting and acting upon the data that is available from an ever-increasing number of sources—sensors in roads, mobile phones, commercial transactions, census and other public records, even personal fitness trackers.”

Navigant Research, 2017

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2017 Energy Efficiency Indicator Survey

1,537 energy and facility management executives from twelve countries

US/Canada Mexico Columbia Brazil Argentina India Singapore China Poland Germany France

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In the US and Canada, smart parking and smart street lighting are the most implemented solutions

Overall, the US and Canada are further along in the impleme ntation

  • f smart

city solution s

US & Canada

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18% 23% 28% 30% 30% 33% 40% 43% 53% Infrastructure development Communications infrastructure Public safety Cost reduction Aging population Sustainability Economic development Population growth Environmental issues

DRIVERS OF SMART CITY INVESTMENTS

Results based on Johnson Control’s 2017 Energy Efficiency Indicator (EEI) survey, including 40 respondents responsible for smart city investment decisions and almost 600 respondents responsible for energy management and investment in their

  • rganization.

Countries included are Colombia, Brazil, Argentina, and Mexico.

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BARRIERS TO SMART CITY INVESTMENTS

10% 10% 10% 13% 23% 35% Lack of private sector engagement Availability of cost effective technology Lack of standards Lack of city leadership Lack of proven business cases Availability of funding

Results based on Johnson Control’s 2017 Energy Efficiency Indicator (EEI) survey, including 40 respondents responsible for smart city investment decisions and almost 600 respondents responsible for energy management and investment in their organization. Countries included are Colombia, Brazil, Argentina, and Mexico.

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Thank You

Urban Efficiency Smart Infrastructure Smart Buildings Smart Energy Smart Transportation

lisa.a.brown@jci.com