Building on an interdisciplinary collaboration with the Yucatan State Government, UM researchers will design a smart city next to the Yucatan Science and Technology Park.
CORAL GABLES, Fla. (July 12, 2016)—In March, the University of Miami announced a hemispheric collaboration between its Center for Computational Science (CCS) and the Yucatan State Government’s Information Technologies Innovation Center, which is known as Heuristic and located in the Yucatan Science and Technology Park. Taking that collaboration a step further, the School of Architecture, the Responsive Architecture and Design Lab (RAD-UM Lab) and the CCS will come together to design Zenciti, a smart city next to the science park.
“Instances where smart cities are designed and implemented from scratch are very rare. We are fortunate to have the opportunity to design a hyper-connected city where urban infrastructure, municipal services, and social activities are orchestrated into a vibrant and sustainable environment,” said Rodolphe el-Khoury, the Dean of the School of Architecture and Director of the RAD-UM Lab.
Zenciti came about when a group of developers and leaders in the IT industry joined forces for an opportunity they saw in the growing knowledge economy of Yucatan that is developing due to a strategic geographic location and various other social and economic circumstances, including the Yucatan Science and Technology Park, located 30 minutes from downtown Mérida. Zenciti will bring into play, among other things, a hub for tech startups that should create a synergy with the science park and help fuel development.
el-Khoury and his team think of Zenciti as a startup city.
“Just like startup firms create something innovative that is hard to accommodate within existing companies, a startup city prototypes from the ground up a new way of life, something that departs from existing cities and the lifestyles, transactions, governance and culture they enable,” said el-Khoury.
Zenciti will occupy roughly 650 acres and will provide 6,000 jobs in the area, on top of the 4,000 that will be created by the science and technology park. The multi-disciplinary team working on the smart city includes the following:
School of Architecture:
Dean Rodolphe el-Khoury, PI/RAD-UM
Adib Cure–Architecture and Urban Design
Carie A. Penabad–Architecture and Urban Design
Juhong Park–Computation, Machine Learning, and Smart Systems
Mark Troen–Real Estate Development and Finance
Veruska Vasconez–Digital Media
Center for Computational Science:
Dean Rodolphe el-Khoury–PI/CCS Program Director Smart Cities
Chris Mader–Software Engineering
Joel Zysman–Advanced Computing
College of Engineering:
Wangda Zuo–Energy and Infrastructure
Landolf Rhode-Barbarigos–Responsive Structures
— Special to UM News