Knowledge Agora



Similar Articles

Title Unicorn planning: Lessons from the rise and fall of an American 'smart' mega-development
ID_Doc 39951
Authors Rebentisch, H; Thompson, C; Côté-Roy, L; Moser, S
Title Unicorn planning: Lessons from the rise and fall of an American 'smart' mega-development
Year 2020
Published
Abstract Over the past two decades, 'smart' urban mega-developments built from scratch have proliferated across the Global South. More recently, similar techno-utopian enclaves are being planned in North America, including Union Point, a smart city project south of Boston announced in 2017. We use the case of Union Point to think through why public and private actors with conventionally competing interests, including local governments, international technology companies, and real estate developers, are collaborating enthusiastically to create smart mega-developments. This alignment of interests in the use of 'tech' to engineer the 'city of the future', and the pervasive idealism, entrepreneurialism, and 'high-risk, high-rewards' attitudes that enable 'instant' smart mega-developments, is characterized by what we term 'unicorn planning'. This article connects Union Point to the global phenomenon of tabula rasa smart city developments and suggests that Union Point reproduces problems of earlier smart city experiments built from scratch in the Middle East and Asia. We critically examine local officials' susceptibility to being seduced by smart city rhetoric, and highlight their troubling willingness to cede public land, power, citizen privacy, and data governance to corporate actors in their entrepreneurial quest to create an instant 'tech' hub.
PDF http://escholarship.mcgill.ca/downloads/6108vh80q

Similar Articles

ID Score Article
45519 Anthopoulos, L Smart utopia VS smart reality: Learning by experience from 10 smart city cases(2017)
44116 Heaphy, L; Wiig, A The 21st century corporate town: The politics of planning innovation districts(2020)
38362 Ferreira, A; Oliveira, FP; von Schönfeld, KC Planning cities beyond digital colonization? Insights from the periphery(2022)
36925 Shelton, T; Zook, M; Wiig, A The 'actually existing smart city'(2015)Cambridge Journal Of Regions Economy And Society, 8.0, 1
39059 Grossi, G; Pianezzi, D Smart cities: Utopia or neoliberal ideology?(2017)
44162 Carr, C; Hesse, M When Alphabet Inc. Plans Toronto's Waterfront: New Post-Political Modes of Urban Governance(2020)Urban Planning, 5, 1
37276 White, JM Anticipatory logics of the smart city's global imaginary(2016)Urban Geography, 37.0, 4
45634 Sadowski, J; Bendor, R Selling Smartness: Corporate Narratives and the Smart City as a Sociotechnical Imaginary(2019)Science Technology & Human Values, 44, 3
35916 Adám, S A critical geographical analysis of the smart city concept - theoretical background and possible research directions(2020)Ter Es Tarsadalom, 34, 2
43284 Goh, K Who's Smart? Whose City? The Sociopolitics of Urban Intelligence(2015)
Scroll