{"id":476782,"date":"2021-12-07T06:50:36","date_gmt":"2021-12-07T14:50:36","guid":{"rendered":"https:\/\/www.esri.com\/about\/newsroom\/?post_type=blog&#038;p=476782"},"modified":"2025-05-08T19:30:22","modified_gmt":"2025-05-09T02:30:22","slug":"georgia-tech-students-smart-city-tokyo","status":"publish","type":"blog","link":"https:\/\/www.esri.com\/about\/newsroom\/blog\/georgia-tech-students-smart-city-tokyo","title":{"rendered":"Tokyo: Reimagining the World\u2019s Largest City with Advanced Analytics"},"author":7982,"featured_media":0,"parent":0,"menu_order":0,"template":"","format":"standard","meta":{"_acf_changed":false,"sync_status":"","episode_type":"","audio_file":"","castos_file_data":"","podmotor_file_id":"","cover_image":"","cover_image_id":"","duration":"","filesize":"","filesize_raw":"","date_recorded":"","explicit":"","block":"","itunes_episode_number":"","itunes_title":"","itunes_season_number":"","itunes_episode_type":"","_links_to":"","_links_to_target":""},"categories":[476112],"tags":[711,165142,476722,7142,17672],"industry":[],"esri-blog-category":[478442,478302],"esri_blog_department":[478202,492402],"class_list":["post-476782","blog","type-blog","status-publish","format-standard","hentry","category-urban-planning","tag-smart-cities","tag-students","tag-tokyo","tag-transportation","tag-urban-design","esri-blog-category-education","esri-blog-category-transportation","esri_blog_department-infrastructure","esri_blog_department-urban-planning"],"acf":{"video_source":"","video_start":"","video_stop":"","short_description":"At Georgia Tech\u2019s Tokyo Smart City Studio, students use GIS to investigate smart city solutions, and also to craft plans and proposals.  ","pdf":{"host_remotely":false,"file":"","file_url":""},"flexible_content":[{"acf_fc_layout":"sidebar","layout":"standard","image_reference":null,"image_reference_figure":"","spotlight_image":null,"section_title":"","spotlight_name":"","position":"Right","content":"At Georgia Tech, an interdisciplinary program teaches students principles of urban design and gives them tools to apply smart city solutions for Tokyo\u2019s future growth.\r\n\r\nKey Takeaways\r\n<ul>\r\n \t<li>Students at Georgia Tech\u2019s Tokyo Smart City Studio use advanced analytics and geospatial tools to help shape Tokyo\u2019s future.<\/li>\r\n \t<li>Each year, the program picks one part of Tokyo and crafts plans and proposals to transform it.<\/li>\r\n \t<li>Smart city designs include streaming sensor data to monitor and adjust the flow of people and systems.<\/li>\r\n<\/ul>","snippet":""},{"acf_fc_layout":"content","content":"In Tokyo, the world\u2019s largest city, urban planning is a tricky endeavor. The density of the metro area\u2014one out of every 200 people on Earth, packed into an area the size of Connecticut\u2014means that any change to one section can have profound consequences for the entire region.\r\n\r\nTo make a change that may bring millions more into the region requires an especially deft application of geospatial thinking and smart-city planning.\r\n<h3>Faster Than a Speeding Bullet<\/h3>\r\nSince 2016, a new rail station has been under construction in Tokyo\u2019s bustling Shinagawa business district. It will be the jumping-off point for a maglev (magnetic levitation) train that will reach speeds of 311 miles per hour. When the first phase of the route opens around 2027, it will serve Nagoya, Japan\u2019s fourth largest city. A few years later, the route will extend to Osaka, the country\u2019s third largest.\r\n\r\nThe maglev will move passengers from Shinagawa to Osaka in just over an hour\u2014half the time of the same journey on the Japanese bullet train. Perry Yang, a professor of city and regional planning and architecture at the Georgia Institute of Technology, calls the Shinagawa station a \"70-70 gateway\", providing a 70-minute journey for a region of 70 million people."},{"acf_fc_layout":"gallery","gallery_images":[476862,476872,476842,476852]},{"acf_fc_layout":"content","content":"The maglev will, in effect, bring the 70 million people closer together. For them, Yang predicts the project will compress the concept of space and time, exerting a profound impact on urban forms, functions, and experiences. With all this change flowing from a new train that will make an already quick rail journey even quicker, how can one begin to predict and plan for the effect it will have on the urban environment?\r\n<h3><strong>A Living Testbed<\/strong><\/h3>\r\nFor Yang, it\u2019s crucial to take a data-driven approach, visualizing and analyzing what-if scenarios in context of location using geographic information system (GIS) software.\r\n\r\nYang directs Georgia Tech\u2019s Eco Urban Lab, headquarters for the <a href=\"https:\/\/arch.gatech.edu\/tokyo-smart-city-studio\">Tokyo Smart City Studio<\/a>. The project is run in collaboration with Akito Murayama from the University of Tokyo\u2019s department of urban engineering, Yoshiki Yamagata of Keio University, and the Global Carbon Project office in Tsukuba, Japan.\r\n\r\nThe studio includes Georgia Tech students pursuing advanced degrees in architecture, urban design, GIS, and city and regional planning. Each year, they use GIS to explore smart city concepts, crafting planning proposals for one small slice of the Tokyo metro area.\r\n\r\nIn 2020, the Tokyo Smart City Studio began an examination of the area around the new maglev station. Preliminary estimates suggest the terminal could draw an additional one million people to the Shinagawa East neighborhood each day.\r\n\r\nThat new influx will require more retailers, housing, hotels, parks, and pedestrian areas, as well as increased city services. It will put further strain on roadways and increase traffic around the nearby Tokyo Haneda Airport and the existing Shinagawa train station.\r\n\r\nTokyo Smart City Studio students were expected to create a general planning and design framework, with an emphasis on making the district carbon neutral by 2040. GIS provided a way to model various proposals and to present final proposals.\r\n<h3><strong>Placemakers<\/strong><\/h3>\r\nThe interdisciplinary nature of the Tokyo Smart City Studio reflects Yang\u2019s approach to the emerging field of <a href=\"https:\/\/www.cger.nies.go.jp\/gcp\/pdf\/news_20201221\/1330_PerryYang_GCP_workshop_Dec2020.pdf\">urban design<\/a>. A combination of urban planning and architectural methodologies, urban designers take a systems engineering approach to cities.\r\n\r\nIn this view, cities are like dynamic organisms, comprised of ever-changing flows of humanity, often using GIS to model these flows. A key concept is <a href=\"https:\/\/www.smartcitiesdive.com\/ex\/sustainablecitiescollective\/introduction-placemaking\/1291822\/\">placemaking,<\/a> making decisions based on close observation and analysis of how people who inhabit a space use it."},{"acf_fc_layout":"gallery","gallery_images":[476882,476892,476902]},{"acf_fc_layout":"content","content":"For many urban designers, placemaking includes a framework of <a href=\"https:\/\/www.esri.com\/en-us\/arcgis\/geodesign\">geodesign<\/a>, a close reading of large amounts of pertinent geographic information. They use IoT-connected smart technologies to gather data on urban flows, and GIS-based digital twins of the urban environment to model, analyze, and visualize these flows.\r\n\r\n\u201cThe way we understand cities is very different from the previous traditional approach,\u201d Yang said. Whereas a traditional architect sees a project only within the context of the immediate landscape, he explained \u201cwith a computing tool like GIS, we have a greater ability to understand data and information in a systematic way.\u201d\r\n<h3><strong>A New City on the Urban Fringes<\/strong><\/h3>\r\nWhat exactly makes a smart city smart is open to interpretation. From an urban design perspective, Yang sees two basic models.\r\n\r\nOne involves embedding smart technologies directly into the urban environment. IoT-connected sensors measuring the flows in real time can allow the city to change in response to the needs of residents. The other is to use data, analytics, and GIS, to anticipate future changes and plan accordingly.\r\n\r\nThe first idea was prominent in the Tokyo Smart City\u2019s inaugural project in 2016, involving <a href=\"https:\/\/www.cger.nies.go.jp\/gcp\/pdf\/tokyo-smart-city-workshop-report-mar2017.pdf\">Urawa Misono<\/a>, a largely rural region 45 minutes by train from central Tokyo. Urawa Misono features a soccer stadium that had been chosen as a site for the 2020 Summer Olympics.\r\n\r\nAnticipating future growth, the regional government designated a three-square-kilometer region near the stadium as a pilot zone for smart technologies. The local government in nearby Saitama created the Urban Design Center of Misono (UDCMi), a private-public partnership that manages smart-city projects in the zone. UDCMi established networks of IoT sensors around the zone, including homes, buildings, roadsides, and shopping areas.\r\n\r\n\u201cHow we democratize big data analytics and decision-making is one of the greatest challenges 21<sup>st<\/sup> Century smart cities will face while trying to create sustainable, resilient, and socially inclusive environments,\u201d Yang said. \u201cUrawa Misono provides a community-driven model, using data for applications that enhance mobility and efficiency, while mitigating risks such as energy shortages and floods.\u201d\r\n\r\nAs the community grows, flood risk along the Ayase River will increase, intensified by climate change, the loss of rice paddies and agricultural fields, and the region\u2019s bowl-like topography. IoT devices in retention ponds now form an automated flood warning system.\r\n\r\nWorking with Saitama and UDCMi, the Tokyo Smart City Studio proposed several projects for the zone. One idea involved situational public space. Sensors placed in spaces near the soccer stadium could monitor their use, allowing them to morph between being a parking lot and a public exercise space. A smart street light system could measure congestion, switching lights on and off as needed.\r\n<h3><strong>Reimagining Future Communities Using Advanced Analytics<\/strong><\/h3>\r\nThe ideas for Urawa Misono were not limited to futuristic IoT scenarios. The students also considered various ways to increase walkability and encourage alternate modes of transportation. They applied principles of architectural metabolism\u2014a post-War Japanese movement that emphasized the organic adaptability of structures\u2014to a layered system of public spaces at the town\u2019s train station.\r\n\r\nBut in general, those IoT-related ideas were more prominent in the Urawa Misono plans than in the Shinagawa proposals.\r\n\r\n\u201cThat kind of smart city, with new embedded infrastructure, really only works in new developments, or in large redevelopment projects,\u201d said Akito Murayama, a professor in the University of Tokyo\u2019s urban engineering department, a partner in the Tokyo Smart City Studio. \u201cIn those cases, a small group of people can plan and design a good smart city from scratch, and install advanced technologies. It\u2019s much harder with existing communities.\u201d\r\n\r\nFor that reason, the Shinagawa project, which involves an entrenched part of Central Tokyo, is focused more on using the smart city concept as a means of careful analysis. Trying to understand how the maglev will change the immediate environs, and how those changes will evolve over time, poses a formidable challenge."},{"acf_fc_layout":"gallery","gallery_images":[476932,477972,477982,482152]},{"acf_fc_layout":"content","content":"Part of that challenge involves using GIS to perform very complex analysis that links the urban environment with demography. The train will tie the region together, but the region\u2019s population, like the rest of Japan, is declining.\r\n\r\n\u201cAlthough Osaka is shrinking, Tokyo is still gaining population,\u201d Murayama said. \u201cBut there\u2019s a long-term forecast of population loss, and aging is a large issue.\u201d\r\n<h3><strong>Partnering With Private Industry<\/strong><\/h3>\r\nBeginning this year and scheduled to run through 2023, the next phase of the Tokyo Smart City Studio will examine Nihonbashi, a commercial district a few miles north of Shinagawa, and home to Tokyo Station, the city\u2019s major terminal. Students will work with the private developer-funded Mitsui Fudosan UTokyo Laboratory, the kind of partnership Yang hopes will be a model for future projects.\r\n\r\n\u201cTechnology is shaping how we understand and design our communities and built environments,\u201d Yang said. \u201cThe future education of city planning and architecture students urgently requires new models to address climate, societal, and urban challenges. That includes how we incorporate big data analytics, especially geographic data, into collaborative design processes to make communities more sustainable, resilient and socially inclusive.\u201d\r\n\r\n&nbsp;\r\n\r\nLearn more about how <a href=\"https:\/\/www.esri.com\/en-us\/arcgis\/products\/arcgis-urban\/overview\">ArcGIS Urban contributes to smart city planning<\/a>."}],"references":null},"yoast_head":"<!-- This site is optimized with the Yoast SEO Premium plugin v25.9 (Yoast SEO v25.9) - https:\/\/yoast.com\/wordpress\/plugins\/seo\/ -->\n<title>Tokyo: Reimagining the World\u2019s Largest City with Advanced Analytics<\/title>\n<meta name=\"description\" content=\"Students at Georgia Tech\u2019s Tokyo Smart City Studio apply advanced geospatial tools to help plan for Tokyo\u2019s future growth.\" \/>\n<meta name=\"robots\" content=\"index, follow, max-snippet:-1, max-image-preview:large, max-video-preview:-1\" \/>\n<link rel=\"canonical\" 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