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International Technical Working Group on Smart
Cities Architectures
Dr. Martin J. [email protected]
Smart Grid and Cyber-Physical Systems Program OfficeNational Institute of Standards and Technology (NIST)
US Department of Commerce
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Smart City Architectures
• Smart City technologies are being developed and deployed at a rapid pace.
• Many previous smart city deployments are custom solutions.
• A number of architectural design efforts are underway worldwide but have not yet converged.
• NIST and its partners are convening a public working group to distill a common set of architectural features from these architectural efforts and city stakeholders.
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Goal: A reference framework for the development of architectures for incremental and composable Smart Cities
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How We Envision ItThis new activity builds on two NIST initiatives:
oThe Global Cities Teams Challenge that encourages “action clusters” to form and collaborate to demonstrate technologies at city scale.
oThe CPS Public Working Group that is developing a Framework for Cyber-Physical Systems (CPS) which provides for a scientific underpinning of the description of the CPS/Internet of Things.
The following already exists:oMultiple architectures in Smart Cities, Internet of Things, and vertical
cyber-physical domainsoExample deployments from the Global Cities Teams Challenge and
others
These initiatives provide outputs that will be useful in distilling the common requirements and solutions observed into a Smart City Framework that supports a composable or building block approach to Smart Cities.
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How to Discover Consensus
Union of Applications
Architecture/Framework
B
Architecture/Framework
A
Architecture/Framework
C
Common Pivotal Points of
Interoperability
Possible Extension
Points
Process:1) Transform architectures to CPS
Framework normal form2) Transform deployments to CPS
Framework normal form3) Compare results of 1) and 2)4) Broaden consensus of
intersections5) Document Smart Cities
Framework
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Pivotal Points of Interoperability - PPI
To determine PPI the participants will review the following:• Examples of current architectures• Success stories about how seamless integrations were achieved• Standards to support the modular integration of new functions• Best practices - how to integrate features into existing infrastructures• Educational materials and tools for Smart City features
If you standardize everything, you freeze out innovation. If you standardize nothing, you get non-interoperable clusters that can’t be easily integrated. The principle of Pivotal Points of Interoperability is to find consensus standardized interfaces that deal with composition of CPS without constraining innovation.
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When? The timeline:
NIST is convening a public working group from around the globe including:
• Smart city leaders, administrators and planners
• Manufacturers of Internet of Things and other Smart City related components
• Researchers studying the integration of technologies into smart city designs
• Standards organizations investigating and developing smart city standards
• Industrial and commercial consortia developing IoT specifications and designs
• Governments involved in smart city planning and policy
Activities will begin in November 2015 with a key kickoff workshop in February 2016 (Europe) and March 2016 (at NIST). A draft result is
planned to be available late fall, 2016
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How to Get Involved
•Collaboration Web Site (under construction):ohttps://pages.nist.gov/smartcitiesarchitecture
•Mail list: oto email: to [email protected]; oto join: [email protected]
•Contact: [email protected]
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Questions?