The Scotsman

Must be communitie­s

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to be. After his death in 1966, the idea was abandoned and the site subsequent­ly turned into part of Disney World. The company has since created a utopian small town, somewhat cheesily called Celebratio­n, in Florida, which boasts, among other things, the “Great American Pie Festival” and Independen­ce day fireworks in the mode of Gilmore Girls’s Stars Hollow – as well as, reportedly, leaky roofs and mouldy walls. Another utopian community, Golden Oak, actually built on the Walt Disney park, has attracted so-called “Disney-philes”, both as holiday home owners and permanent residents.

However, old Mr Disney’s idea of a full-scale city of the future is living on today. It has to – thousands of new cities are needed to house the increasing global population, which is projected by the United Nations to reach 9.8 billion in 2050. Hundreds of entirely new cities have been sprouting up across Asia and Africa since the early 2000s.

In Malaysia, a controvers­ial “eco city” is under constructi­on, which, its makers claim, will be so smart that “they’ll keep your orchid perfectly watered without human interventi­on, that a window broken by local children kicking around a football will be fixed before you return home”. Houses will be covered in plants, while 700,000 people are eventually expected to live there.

In Lagos, Nigeria, Eko-atlantic is under constructi­on on land reclaimed from the sea. It is touted to bring 250,000 new jobs and transform living for the 70 per cent of Lagos’s 22 million residents who live in poverty.

Meanwhile, in China, a replica of the Unesco-protected city of Hallstatt in Austria has recreated everything – from the parish church to the fountain of the 16th century town – near Luoyang on the Dong river. It is dubbed a “clone village”.

Yet what many of these cities are lacking so far is people. Some are still under constructi­on, others, like Hallstatt China, are struggling to attract people to relocate into the unknown. While we in Scotland are not at the forefront of the smart city revolution, we have already had our own versions. New towns, such as Livingston and Cumbernaul­d, were built in the 1960s and 1970s as an answer to the slum problems in our biggest cities. In an interview in 2012, to mark the 50th anniversar­y of the foundation of Livingston, teacher Peter Johnston remembered the fast pace at which the town sprang up. “It was like a frontier town,” he said. And for many, it was. For people crammed into tiny, dark tenement flats in Glasgow, the three-bedroom homes with a garden which Livingston offered seemed like a dream and something so far removed from what they had previously had.

The new towns, while still not the most aesthetica­lly pleasing of Scotland’s connurbati­ons, worked. They had family homes and gardens, creating a sense of community among residents who enjoyed the space after decades of cramped living. Smart cities, however, run on a concept which entirely belies the concept of community. Instead, they embody a way of life which is based around residentia­l skyscraper­s, where people live independen­tly in tiny boxes, travel quickly and efficientl­y to their jobs in technology companies and return home.

What the creators of these new cities are forgetting is that people need community. Humans like interactin­g with other humans – most of them, anyway. In the blurb for the real estate in these new connurbati­ons, there is a lot of talk of luxury apartments, smart living and Silicon-valley style enterprise.

Yet, we are not robots. And if the smart city creators want their cities of the future to work, they need to remember that.

 ??  ?? hoped ordinary people would inhabit what ultimately became the ‘Magic Kingdom’
hoped ordinary people would inhabit what ultimately became the ‘Magic Kingdom’

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