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Events

Jacobs Urban Tech Hub

Upcoming Events

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Fair Paths to EV Charging

January 11, 2023 @2:00pm EST

The infrastructure of motorization cleaved deep divides in the American landscape. As cities think about EV charging projects, they need to understand what kinds of infrastructure investments will create fairer outcomes. This event will bring together innovators from municipal utilities, national research labs, and sustainable energy advocacy organizations who are developing the next generation of tools cities can use for planning more equitable rollouts of vehicle charging infrastructure.

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Past Events

Replay any of our events on our YouTube channel or just catch the highlights on our 2-Minute Takes playlist.

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The New Infrastructure: How Tech Can Help New York Build for 2050 (not 1950)

December 14, 2022

The Jacobs Urban Tech Hub partnered with CityAge to present The New Infrastructure. This half day, in person event was inspired by the fact that the United States is carrying out a historic reinvestment in its infrastructure and cities. Leaders from government, industry, engineering, financing and technology highlighted how America’s global capital is:

  • Revitalizing central business districts with new urban design
  • Re-inventing mobility
  • Using design, technology and renewable energy systems to decarbonize
  • Creating both digital and physical connectivity
  • Weaving resiliency into new and rebuilt infrastructure
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local infrastructure hub poster

The Surprising Technology of Nature-Based Solutions

December 5, 2022

Natural features and processes are vital tools for building resilient communities and infrastructure. But even as we shift away from “gray” infrastructure approaches like dams, seawalls, roads, pipes and water treatment plants, technology can evolve to play a new supportive role.

This webinar will bring city leaders together with experts in predictive risk analytics, remote sensing, and control systems to understand opportunities for digital technologies that can enable and enhance nature-based approaches to resilience with better data, models, and automation.

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SCNY Urban Tech Summit 2022

October 24, 2022

The Urban Tech Summit returned for its 2022 edition at Cornell Tech’s Verizon Executive Education Center. This year, the Summit delved into “The Climate Mobilization.” We’re bringing together leaders to discuss how the New York and global urban innovation communities can better solve local and global climate challenges.

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Ambiente

AMbiENtE: Autonomy and Mobility in Engineered and Natural Environments

June 23, 2022

This all day event featured three distinguished keynote talks focusing on urban air quality and heat islands, smart cities and urban technologies, and electric power systems and information networks.

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NYC OpenData

Open Data Week 2022

March 4, 2022

Between Saturday, March 5 and Sunday, March 13, more than 100 in-person and virtual events were held to celebrate publicly available data about NYC.

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March 24, 2021 | The Ghost Road: AVs and Urban Mobility Markets

Industry titans Alphabet, Amazon, and GM are on the verge of rolling out robotaxis across North America. Cities struggled to respond to the rise of ride-hail. Are they better prepared for the restructuring of urban mobility markets that lies ahead? Will automation drive the creation of new “traction monopolies”? Could algorithmic manipulation play havoc on progressive policies like congestion pricing? What have we learned from financialization in other essential urban goods and services that can inform how we shape the markets for digital and automated mobility?

This session drew upon Anthony Townsend’s 2020 book Ghost Road: Beyond the Driverless Car to reveal what we can learn from past technological transformations of urban transportation as we consider the prospects for digital mobility markets and how automation could radically reshape roles, rights, and responsibilities for everyone involved. Transportation technology consultant Andrew Salzberg, series co-host, joined us as a discussant.

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Michael Samuelian headshot

December 15, 2020 | Defending Density: The Future of Urban Systems in New York

As the retail culling continues and the reconfiguration of office buildings gives way to more substantial retrofits, the commercial landscape of New York City’s neighborhoods is undergoing multiple, successive waves of change. How can new digital technologies make cities and urban systems productive again? What new sources of data on business, consumer, and workforce activity could be tapped to better inform both economic relief efforts and more resilient long-range planning? Urban Tech Hub Director Michael Samuelian led a conversation with local real estate, proptech, and economic development organizations on the future of enhanced urban systems and the future of New York City’s neighborhoods.

Key takeaways from the discussion:

  • Working and commuting patterns are going to change, but we don’t yet know how.
  • There’s an opportunity for bold urban tech innovation, but we haven’t yet fully seized it—the institutional desire isn’t entirely there yet.
  • Public schools will be the key to addressing inequality during the city’s recovery, yet face some of the biggest technological hurdles of any vital urban system.

 

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November 17, 2020 | Did We Get It Right? The Making of A Ten-Year Urban Tech Forecast

How do futurists and their clients make sense of the intersection of emerging technologies and socioeconomic trends? What’s the difference between a prediction and a forecast? In this roundtable Anthony Townsend and Benjamin De La Peña take us on a guided tour of A Planet of Civic Laboratories: The Future of Cities, Information, and Inclusion (PDF • Miro), a ten-year forecast commissioned in 2010 to inform philanthropic efforts to use big data as a tool to help the urban poor. We discussed how the map was made, what we got right, what we missed, and how this experience informs the Urban Tech Hub’s ongoing horizon scanning work. We were joined by futurist Scott Smith of Changeist, author of the new book How to Future: Leading and Sense-Making in an Age of Hyperchange to hear about some of the changes in tech forecasting over the last decade, and also discussed Benjie’s ongoing work mapping the tech stack for informal mobility in the Global South.

Key takeaways from the discussion:

  • Open data has produced many innovations but not fully lived up to the enormous hype, and evolved in unexpected ways.
  • Power can’t be ignored in urban tech forecasting. Much of what we saw over the last ten years was existing institutions extending and remapping their power.
  • Retrospectives of forecasting efforts highlight both the content hits and misses, but more importantly the processes of sharing and interpreting the forecast.

 

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October 28, 2020 | The Platform Insurgency: Does Urban Tech Have an Ethics Problem?

A special joint session with the Cornell Tech Digital Life Initiative Seminar

Much of urban tech exploits today’s most ethically-charged technologies and business practices—such as indiscriminate location tracking, facial recognition, and gig work to fundamentally reprogram how urban systems function. As these failures become clearer, and broader awareness of systemic injustice in society grows, how can the emerging field of urban tech clarify choices between right and wrong? Cornell Tech’s Helen Nissenbaum and Anthony Townsend co-host a panel discussion featuring Molly Turner from UC-Berkeley’s Haas School of Business, UNStudio’s Ren Yee, and Gary Johnson, Director of Strategy and Operations for the NYC Mayor’s Office of the Chief Technology Officer.

Key takeaways from the discussion:

  • Focus on first principle thinking – be clear about the problem you are trying to solve, and whose problems we are solving
  • We should anticipate a machine-readable world
  • Individuals should take charge of the ways in which their data is used
  • Urban innovation would focus on cross-domain synergy to develop and deliver better services to local residents
  • We have to incorporate vulnerable communities in user-centered design
  • We need smarter communities in order to have smart cities

Read a discussion paper by Cornell Tech Urbanist In Residence, Dr. Anthony Townsend, “What is urban tech? Definitions, aims, and ethical tensions” (PDF, 924k)

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Sascha Haselmayer headshot

September 30, 2020 | Embracing Austerity: How Will Cities Innovate?

As cities face the biggest fiscal crisis in a generation or more, technology and innovation programs are among the first on the chopping block. Yet as European cities’ experience over the last decade has shown, it is possible to push an urban tech agenda forward under austerity. Cornell Tech Urbanist-In-Residence Anthony Townsend led a conversation with Sascha Haselmayer, the founder and CEO of CityMart and a New America Foundation fellow, discussing how cities can empower social entrepreneurs to co-produce government innovation.

Key takeaways from the discussion:

  • Structural shortcomings in local government are a persistent obstacle to urban tech adoption.
  • In the UK, procurement reforms allowed some local governments to embrace austerity budgets by tapping social entrepreneurs and co-production of services.
  • A shift in incentives from procurement transactions to service delivery is needed.
  • Urban tech must avoid overselling its cost-cutting potential in the near future.

 

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