Interviews

06.08.18

Helping a city understand itself

Source: PSE Aug/Sept 2018

SPONSORED INTERVIEW

The urban landscape is changing. How can local authorities keep up with citizen behaviour? Stephen Leece, managing director at Citi Logik, tells PSE’s Luana Salles that big data might just be the solution.

The way people are moving is fundamentally changing. The classic view of commuting to work – living in one place, working in another, and repeating that routine five days a week – is no longer a truism, with people now working from different locations and spending their time fundamentally differently to the way they did even just five years ago.

As a result, the urban environment is no longer what we imagined it to be: the movement patterns of the citizens of today are practically unrecognisable. Understanding what their behaviour looks like and the dynamics of how a city lives and moves is a wholly new challenge.

Designing an effective connectivity strategy that accurately caters to the transport needs of those who move through the city poses one of the greatest challenges. Relying on existing data – often collected manually through roadside surveys – to make decisions about roadworks, highway planning, traffic flows and even cycle lanes will prove to be costly and statistically unreliable.

So how can this process be simplified? Well, they say that in the digital age, big data is the new electricity that powers a city.

Anonymised data

Citi Logik is working alongside Vodafone to help local authorities to better understand citizens’ journeys and build overall patterns of movement. It’s no longer about individuals answering questions at the side of the road to a council representative armed with clipboards; it’s about harnessing the existing 3/4G network to understand demand patterns and multimodal movement.

The idea has been seven years in the making. Speaking to PSE, Stephen Leece, managing director at Citi Logik, explained that the two organisations first went to the Information Commissioner’s Office – even before GDPR was on the horizon – to understand the compliancy requirements around anonymisation. They have spent the last three years working with large engineering consultancies to reach a census-level quality standard that ensures any future work abides by a very high benchmark.

“If you’re going to do something better, faster and cheaper, you have to start with the better,” said Leece. “The ‘better’ is quality, and statistically significant data volumes. The ‘faster’ is that it’s a much more non-intrusive collection of data using existing infrastructure, which is clearly more efficient and better for society – you’re not putting large amounts of sensors on the streets or anything of that nature. The ‘cheaper’ is providing something to a local authority that it would not otherwise have been able to afford.”

Journey time reliability

The Citi Logik boss spoke to me shortly after meeting with a northern city council which has just adopted ‘data as a service,’ where his company and Vodafone have started deploying this technology to help build a comprehensive view of the city. Even though it’s still early days, some interesting insight has already surfaced: for example, the average vehicle travel speeds on major roads are actually slower than cycling speeds. So why not encourage people to cycle down these roads instead of driving?

“The awareness of what’s going on and what the issues are – relating to what is called journey time reliability, or how consistently you can travel from A to B – is critical to changing that,” continued Leece. But most importantly, the process is evidential: with the right information, councils can easily explain and prove to their residents why it is making certain decisions around road usage.

This is especially true in the age of digital consent. “The most contentious example is when a device is placed on a street where there is a wi-fi connection, and they’re picking up signals from people passing by without their agreement,” he said. “These sorts of things are not really appropriate in this world. The whole approach is about doing it in a way that gets the buy-in of not only the local authority itself, but also of the people who vote them into office.”

Beyond just transport

Whilst Vodafone and Citi Logik are interested in working with local authorities on a subscription-based, continual basis, Leece ran through some of achievements of single-use projects they have recently carried out. For a city council in the north west of England, for example, data around car parking – one of the biggest contributors to congestion if not optimised properly – helped it understand where people travelled for work and retail; where they started and ended their journey; and how they changed transport modes along the way.

“That’s really important, because if you want to put in Park & Ride schemes and understand the provision of services into the city, you need to help the city understand itself first,” Leece told me.

Although transport is the chief area to benefit from this work, it’s not the only target. The next major stepping stone, according to Citi Logik, is urban planning – determining what a commercial developer needs to contribute to a local environment, and how it will impact the existing landscape – followed by public inquiries and service provision. “Healthcare provision is the most obvious: if you can understand the journeys of everyone trying to get to a major healthcare facility, such as a hospital, then you can optimise the movements to those places,” argued the managing director.

Pollution monitoring is also a part of health planning. If you can improve the flow of people in and around an urban space, then you can cut down on dangerous pollution levels which currently dictate that city-dwellers will live five years less on average. And if you can better manage the sheer volume of freight vehicles on the road delivering packages to online shoppers, you can ensure convenience and capacity go hand in hand.

Getting involved

The opportunity is there to transform our conception of what makes a city truly ‘smart.’ But can the public sector achieve this without the help of the private sector? 

“If we look at the sharing economy, there are different ways of doing things. The use of the existing infrastructure, which we’re all paying for, is critical. And it’s a critical part of the city: reusing the data from existing infrastructure is really important,” noted Leece.

“Data is an area of expertise, and you need people to focus on it just like with any other core service. Ultimately, councils and regions should be working with people who can add value to their core mission. They should be spending their time on the policymaking, rather than necessarily creating data themselves.”

The two companies are ready to speak to local authorities who are interested in harnessing digitally innovative techniques to shape a better urban realm and to grow the local digital economy. If this sounds like you, make sure to get in touch.

Comments

There are no comments. Why not be the first?

Add your comment

public sector executive tv

more videos >

latest public sector news

Leeds’ Clean Air Zone Plans Suspended for the foreseeable future

19/08/2020Leeds’ Clean Air Zone Plans Suspended for the foreseeable future

Leeds City Council have today (August 19) announced that their plans for a Clean Air Zone within the city may not have to go ahead due to lower e... more >
Apprenticeships on the rise across London boroughs

19/08/2020Apprenticeships on the rise across London boroughs

According to recent statistics by London Councils, apprenticeships directly created by London boroughs are up 14% on the previous  year. ... more >
Colleges set to receive £200m in Funding

19/08/2020Colleges set to receive £200m in Funding

Over 180 colleges are set to receive a share of £200m, in order to repair and refurbish buildings and campuses. The funding makes up p... more >

the raven's daily blog

Cleaner, greener, safer media: Increased ROI, decreased carbon

23/06/2020Cleaner, greener, safer media: Increased ROI, decreased carbon

Evolution is crucial in any business and Public Sector Executive is no different. Long before Covid-19 even became a thought in the back of our minds, the team at PSE were looking at innovative ways to deliver its content to our audience in a more dynamic and responsive manner. We’re conscious to take the time to both prot... more >
read more blog posts from 'the raven' >

comment

Peter Kyle MP: It’s time to say thank you this Public Service Day

21/06/2019Peter Kyle MP: It’s time to say thank you this Public Service Day

Taking time to say thank you is one of the hidden pillars of a society. Being on the receiving end of some “thanks” can make communit... more >
How community-led initiatives can help save the housing shortage

19/06/2019How community-led initiatives can help save the housing shortage

Tom Chance, director at the National Community Land Trust Network, argues that community-led initiatives are a productive way of helping to solve... more >
Aberdeen's green transport fleet attracting international attention

19/06/2019Aberdeen's green transport fleet attracting international attention

Aberdeen City Council’s hydrogen spokesperson, councillor Philip Bell, highlights the Granite City’s determination to play a leading ... more >
A fifth of public sector workers have never received a thank you from the people they serve

13/06/2019A fifth of public sector workers have never received a thank you from the people they serve

A fifth of the country’s public sector workers say they have NEVER received a ‘thank you’ for doing their job as Public Service... more >

last word

Prevention: Investing for the future

Prevention: Investing for the future

Rob Whiteman, CEO at the Chartered Institute of Public Finance (CIPFA), discusses the benefits of long-term preventative investment. Rising demand, reducing resource – this has been th... more > more last word articles >

editor's comment

25/10/2017Take a moment to celebrate

Devolution, restructuring and widespread service reform: from a journalist’s perspective, it’s never been a more exciting time to report on the public sector. That’s why I could not be more thrilled to be taking over the reins at PSE at this key juncture. There could not be a feature that more perfectly encapsulates this... read more >

public sector focus

LGA: ‘Air pollution is a major public health issue’

17/08/2020LGA: ‘Air pollution is a major public health issue’

The Local Government Association (LGA) has ca... more >
Automating back-office processes for local authorities

29/07/2020Automating back-office processes for local authorities

Words provided by Cantium Business Solutions,... more >