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    Planning support systems for smart cities

    Access Status
    Fulltext not available
    Authors
    Pettit, C.
    Bakelmun, A.
    Lieske, S.
    Glackin, S.
    Hargroves, K.
    Thomson, Giles
    Shearer, H.
    Dia, H.
    Newman, Peter
    Date
    2017
    Type
    Journal Article
    
    Metadata
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    Citation
    Pettit, C. and Bakelmun, A. and Lieske, S. and Glackin, S. and Hargroves, K. and Thomson, G. and Shearer, H. et al. 2017. Planning support systems for smart cities. City, Culture and Society. 12: pp. 13-24.
    Source Title
    City, Culture and Society
    DOI
    10.1016/j.ccs.2017.10.002
    ISSN
    1877-9166
    School
    Sustainability Policy Institute
    URI
    http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.11937/59365
    Collection
    • Curtin Research Publications
    Abstract

    In an era of smart cities, planning support systems (PSS) offer the potential to harness the power of urban big data and support land-use and transport planning. PSS encapsulate data-driven modelling approaches for envisioning alternative future cities scenarios. They are widely available but have limited adoption in the planning profession (Russo, Lanzilotti, Costabile, & Pettit, 2017). Research has identified issues preventing their mainstream adoption to be, among others, the gap between PSS supply and demand (Geertman, 2016), their difficulty of use, a need for greater understanding of PSS capabilities and a lack of awareness of their applications (Russo et al., 2017; Vonk, Geertman, & Schot, 2005). To address this, a review of five PSS is conducted in the context of four vignettes applied in Australia and applicable internationally. A critical review has been undertaken, demonstrating how these PSS provide an evidence basis to understand, model and manage growing cities. The results suggest that PSS can assist in undertaking key tasks associated with the planning process. In addition to supporting planning and decision making, PSS can potentially enable better co-ordination between city, state and federal planning and infrastructure agencies, thus promoting a multi-scaled approach that improves local and national data sharing, modelling, reporting and scenario planning. The research demonstrates that PSS can assist in navigating the complexities of rapid multi-faceted urban growth to achieve better-informed planning outcomes. The paper concludes by outlining ways PSS address limitations of the past and can begin to address anticipated future challenges.

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