4.6 Article

A Post-Corona Perspective for Smart Cities: 'Should I Stay or Should I Go?'

Journal

SUSTAINABILITY
Volume 13, Issue 17, Pages -

Publisher

MDPI
DOI: 10.3390/su13179988

Keywords

smart cities; happy and healthy citizens; new urban world; resilience; intelligent transformation; COVID-19; data analytics

Funding

  1. Axel och Margaret Ax:son Johnsons Stiftelse, Sweden
  2. Romanian Ministry of Research and Innovation, CNCS-UEFISCDI within the PNCDI III project ReGrowEU-Advancing ground-breaking research in regional growth and development theories, through a resilience approach: towards a convergent, balanced and sustainable [PN-III-P4-ID-PCCF-2016-0166]

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With the continuous growth of population and increasing congestion in cities, urban development is facing greater challenges. The pandemic has emphasized the importance of people-centric development strategies in cities to maintain the happiness and health of residents.
This exploratory essay aims to provide a reflection on the possible implications of the COVID-19 pandemic for urban development and to sketch a plausible picture of the urban future. It serves as an introductory contribution to the Special Issue of this journal on 'happy and healthy cities', with particular emphasis on the implications of COVID-19 in pluriform cities. There is no doubt that contemporary cities are growing, and have become more dynamic and crowded. The more people, the bigger the challenges are to manage urban growth and to cope with-and control-density frictions, such as pandemics (e.g., COVID-19). Cities have the task to satisfy the essential needs of many heterogeneous people and to develop appropriate people-based strategies in order to make or keep people happy and healthy. The current COVID-19 disaster is a real urban challenge. The deployment of smart cities' strategies and the use of digital technology tools in order to capture and provide intelligent internal and external online information and communication opportunities may help cities-in active partnership with their residents ('smart citizens' voice')-to manage shocks and disruptions in the urban system. Clearly, cities are dynamic and adaptive organisms with a high resilience capacity. A key question addressed in this paper is whether urban inhabitants may be inclined to move out of the city due to human health threats, or whether intelligent digital technology tools will be able to overcome the current challenges to the 'urban way of life'. The paper argues that modern information and communication technology offers a range of opportunities for a healthy city life, so that the COVID-19 pandemic will most likely not lead to a massive demographic outflow from urban agglomerations to less densely populated areas in particular rural areas. Instead, what is called the 'corona crisis' may cause just a ripple in the permanent dynamic evolution of cities.

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