FutureStructure Data
-
Staffing shortages and the lasting shifts to commuter patterns has pumped the brakes on the recovery of transit ridership. Even as gas prices reach record highs across the country, ridership hasn’t seen a large uptick.
-
Each winning city will receive an individualized Readiness Workshop and host of tech tools to help further its efforts toward becoming a smart city.
-
Two projects in Georgia and New York are exploring new technologies which embed power generation, computing and more into paving, opening up this right-of-way space to accommodate solar panels and smart city sensors.
More Stories
-
A recent study concluded that the more participants used smart city services, the higher quality of life they achieved.
-
The city's Innovation District is a proving ground, with tests being run on multiple programs that carry out similar functions.
-
Eligibility would be limited to blocks where data shows 85 percent of vehicles travel at speeds greater than 3 miles per hour above the posted speed limit.
-
Its ports and freight system account for a significant portion of its air pollution. Will aggressive new state and regional efforts once again serve as a model for the nation?
-
In its first U.S. pilot, the startup plans to use AI software to predict accidents hours before they happen.
-
Private industry is invited to add Internet of Things tech into the city for testing.
-
We also ran into one of our GovTech 100 companies, AppCityLife.
-
Goose Island is transitioning from an industrial hub to a tech-focused one.
-
-
The state is partnering with Nexar, a company that makes an app that turns smartphones into smart dashboard cameras.
-
Open data is not enough to facilitate solutions that can make cities more responsive to resident problems and more prepared for inevitable setbacks like environmental or economic crises.
-
The interactive map displays what condition experts think individual roads are in.
-
According to a new study, cities may be able to predict where collisions are most likely to occur by collecting data on dangerous driving behaviors.
-
Whether monitoring traffic counts, water and air quality or water lines for leaks, sensors and other evolving technologies are increasingly being used by the Triangle cities and nationwide to make more informed, real-time decisions.
-
While San Jose prides itself as a “smart city” that deploys new technology, it doesn’t have privacy policies related to the surveillance equipment.
-
Great Streets is a multi-faceted community investment program that empowers communities to transform their main streets into meaningful public spaces, improving overall community well-being.
-
Eighteen months ago, the Texas Tribune asked the government for documents that should have shed a lot of light on Houston's vulnerability to a massive hurricane. After finally receiving them, it turns out the documents are basically useless.
-
The Bay Area city is looking to implement several autonomous vehicle pilot projects on its streets to determine how the technology can be integrated into the entire transportation ecosystem.
Most Read