Smart regional spaces: Ready, set, go!
Supporting regional and rural NSW in the smart places race
The project partners with three regional NSW councils (Lithgow, Armidale and Parkes) for the development of a spectrum of ‘smart’ digital resources and strategies soon to be available to all regional NSW Councils. These tools will support Councils to assess and design smart places and strategies for local community benefit.
The NSW government is improving digital capabilities in regional and rural areas by providing new hardware, mobile connection and capacity-building through the Regional Digital Connectivity Project. Smart initiatives can support in this process by integrating technology into the built and natural environment leading to improved public infrastructure, smart governance, improved asset management, and evidence-based decision-making.
Up to now, the ‘smart cities movement’ has been all about urban areas and the challenges that come with high density living, traffic congestion, and city open space. That conversation needs to turn to the regional areas so that regional councils and communities can benefit from innovations in community management, infrastructure and the design of public spaces.Â
The Smart Regional Spaces: Ready, Set, Go! project, funded through a $2.2 million grant as part of the Digital Restart Fund under the Smart Places Acceleration Program, aims to address the substantial divide in digital inclusion between urban and rural Australia.
The Project Team will partner with three regional NSW councils to test and pilot the process of creating smart places and enabling equitable digital inclusion for all communities through smart tools, templates and development processes- assisting regional NSW councils to become ‘smart ready’.
The project’s multidisciplinary team includes expertise in planning, landscape architecture, architecture, environment-behaviour, and engineering. We are working together to collaborate with regional NSW councils in three ways:
Firstly, to determine the relevance, applicability and transferability of smart places resources to a NSW regional context. Â
Secondly, to create a smart knowledge network of experts throughout the regions.
And finally, to launch, in mid-2023 the ‘Start Smart-Ready Program’ free to all 91 councils for capacity-building.Â
This project is producing the following digital outputs:
Professor Nancy Marshall, University of Sydney
, University of New South Wales
, University of New South Wales
Professor Robyn Dowling, University of Sydney
Dr Sophia Maalsen, University of Sydney