Amazon Web Services LLC and City of Kansas City have/had a generic relationship

Stores smart city data Amazon Web Services LLC
Uploads smart city data to City of Kansas City
Start Date 2018-00-00
Notes Kansas City Enters ‘Phase 2’ of Its Smart City Transformation A streetcar vehicle moves along Main Street in downtown Kansas City. A streetcar vehicle moves along Main Street in downtown Kansas City. MICHAEL GRASS / ROUTE FIFTY Sponsor Message Most Popular Legalizing Marijuana Could Help Fight the Opioid Epidemic, New Research Says Another State to Consider Chemical Castration for Sex Offenders The Water Safety Conundrum Sponsor Message Sign up for Route Fifty Today Your daily read on state and local government email Featured eBooks Cyber Threats: Preparing States and Localities Disaster Recovery and Resilience Issues in City and County Management Recommended For You Legalizing Marijuana Could Help Fight the Opioid Epidemic, New Research Says California Legislature Considers $4.2 Billion Bond to Prepare for Climate Change Oil and Gas Group Bristles at Prospect of Fracking Ban Dave Nyczepir By Dave Nyczepir, News Editor Connecting state and local government leaders JANUARY 23, 2018 “There is a greater value to the data we maintain as a city than we anticipated,” according to the city’s chief innovation officer. SMART CITIES INNOVATION DATA KANSAS CITY ANALYTICS MISSOURI INTERNET OF THINGS Kansas City, Missouri is entering the second phase of its smart city program with greater appreciation for sensor-generated data and its ability to finetune algorithms to predict future behavior. The city deployed more than 325 public access Wi-Fi points and 128 smart streetlights across its 54-block downtown streetcar corridor, which feeds into a data lake aggregated by Cisco Kinetic for Cities. That data resides in the Amazon Web Services cloud, which urban intelligence platform Xaqt distills into insights on everything from real-time traffic and downtown parking to the relationship between high-speed internet access and the poverty rate. “There is a greater value to the data we maintain as a city than we anticipated,” Bob Bennett, Kansas City’s chief innovation officer, told Route Fifty by phone. Kansas City is a lead anchor customer, or “smart node,” on Xaqt’s MetroGraph platform, a decentralized data plane spanning clients’ metropolitan areas. In mid-to-late March, the city will expand its digital footprint with a request for proposals on additional kiosks and Wi-Fi access points in the eastern third of Kansas City along Prospect Avenue, where a new bus rapid transit line is planned. A proposed extension of the existing streetcar line would bring service six miles south through the Westport and Country Club Plaza entertainment districts and ending at the University District. An expansion of smart water meters into new area of the city is also planned. Smart streetlights detect traffic and parking patterns along with pavement sensors and video cameras monitoring pedestrians, vehicles and left-turn tendencies. Other systems along Main Street manage adaptive traffic light and parking controls, as Route Fifty explored during a previous visit to Kansas City. Sensors and other smart infrastructure line the Main Street corridor in downtown Kansas City's Power and Light District. (Michael Grass / Route Fifty) Xaqt uses that data to define economic opportunities and public safety from a behavioral perspective. “It’s always good to know where somebody can put a coffee shop,” said Chris Crosby, Xaqt’s founder and CEO, in a phone interview. Story Continues Below Sponsor Message Looking at how people move about the downtown corridor, Xaqt’s data scientists can identify highly trafficked areas, and third-party data from 5,000 connected vehicles coming soon scales this ability to the entire metro area. Citizen and visitor journeys, including transportation modes and destinations, are anonymized outside of the area code of the phone being used. Regarding infrastructure, Kansas City launched a street maintenance prediction tool, or pothole predictor, about six months ago. “It’s allowing us to understand roads not as a cold, hard, stationary objects but as a living, breathing things impacted by weather, traffic, types of traffic and age,” Bennett said. Analytics show the city where roads are aging more or less quickly to make street maintenance preventative instead of repairative. Story Continues Below Sponsor Message Potholes result from the expansion and contraction of the asphalt, so advanced cracking is a precursor. Xaqt looks at things like permitting data and bus routes to estimate wear and tear on pavement and generate a forecast where maintenance should be focused. Bennett said he hopes to eventually save 50 percent on emergency road repairs using regularly scheduled labor instead of overtime workers and avoiding the use of quick-curing asphalt that makes the road brittle. The city spends $8 to $10 million a year on road maintenance despite only budgeting between $3 and $6 million, which has created a $40 million work backlog the CIO could wipe out in five years if all goes well. In nine days, Kansas City will see the first in a series of freeze-thaw cycles that will test Xaqt’s algorithm, so the city will know in 68 days if it works as designed. The platform is also helping identify vacant structures often needing repairs with 85 percent accuracy by analyzing building permits and traffic patterns. That information is vital to police and fire personnel responding to an emergency in a building they’d rather not walk into blind. Xaqt’s model was fed a list of known vacant properties and known occupied properties to help it better identify the factors indicative of both, so now users can click on a parcel and see what the model predicts—subsequently validating the response so it can adjust and reforecast. “It takes a full ecosystem to make this thing work,” Bennett said. “Smart City Media, Xaqt, AWS, Cisco, and Sprint—increasingly you’re going to see the individuals competing within yours on one day collaborating in the next city the next day.” PREVIOUSLY on Route Fifty: The Next Step in Kansas City’s Push to Become a ‘Smart City’ Remember the Human Element When Implementing Smart City Technologies Dave Nyczepir is a News Editor at Government Executive’s Route Fifty and is based in Washington, D.C. Share This: NEXT STORY: North America’s Largest Transit System Is the Acid Test for Electric Buses
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