Kathimerini English

Athens joins the internatio­nal club of smart cities

The Greek capital is in good company as it optimizes technology that already exists to make it more readily available to its citizens

- BY LINA GIANNAROU

When we hear the term “smart city,” we tend to think of some sort of place in a science-fiction movie, such as Spike Jonze’s “Her.” Smart lights, smart parking, smart applicatio­ns, buses that fly and citizens with a permanent smile on their faces. Something far from the reality we live in today. But we do have technology already available to us today that drasticall­y improves daily city life. In order to launch Athens into the world of smart cities, however, the groundwork must be laid and the infrastruc­ture developed. Without fuss or fanfare, the process for attaining this has already begun. In recent years the City of Athens has drawn valuable tips and informatio­n from big metropolis­es around the world, particular­ly New York. The aim is to optimize the technology that we already have and make it more readily available to citizens. Out of this came the idea for City Hall to do something it’s never done before, appoint a chief digital officer to coordinate the effort.

A matter of will

Constantin­os Hambidis, a 40-yearold engineer who’s worked with Athens Mayor Giorgos Kaminis, is the man who was hired. “A smart city to me is a buzzword,” he says, pausing to take a first sip of coffee. It’s a very hot Friday afternoon and we’re sitting at a cafe on Skoufa Street. He’s just come from another meeting and has another after this. A back-to-back schedule that’s defined his daily life. “I believe a city can be an interactiv­e one for its residents, visitors and workers, but the municipali­ty, and indeed the country, must first solve five to 10 basic issues. Chief among them is public services. We must be consistent in this regard and provide the right conditions for designing large IT projects so that we can become a better place to be,” he says. For a city to be smart, municipal payments must be able to be made electronic­ally. According to Hambidis, a smart city must have open data and in- formation so its citizens can keep track of how the money that comes from their taxes is being used. Many of these things, he adds, are of minimal cost and it’s more a matter of having the will to do it.

Coordinati­on is needed too, because in any large Greek organizati­on, such as the City of Athens, the left hand rarely knows what the right is doing. Besides the CDO and his team, the city’s Cultural, Sport & Youth Organizati­on, Technopoli­s, childcare centers, 984 Radio and the Athens Solidarity Center are also involved. Most of these organizati­ons have their own independen­t IT structures, but they’re not required to work with others.

Working in sync

“Let’s say the City of Athens is a person. Innovathen­s, the Innovation and Entreprene­urship Hub at Technopoli­s, is an extrovert who is very sociable and goes out for a drink, but this extroversi­on doesn’t come home, or in this case inside the operations of the municipali­ty. On the other hand, there are parts of the municipali­ty that work very hard, but are very introverte­d. They have a well-organized house and work inside it with hardly anybody knowing what they’re doing. The aim is to have all these different people working together in sync – to bring innovation inside the municipali­ty and get the public familiar with what goes on in there,” says Hambidis. An aim, he says, which is to glue the pieces together to form an open, friendly city that better serves its people and its businesses.

I ask Hambidis what he would change in the City of Athens if he had the power. “That’s a good question. Let’s see, it’ll be easier for me to tell you what I’m envious of. I’m envious of the projects that, with the encouragem­ent of the local government, facilitate a market for the expansion of high-speed broadband networks. This to me is the base that’s needed to even begin talking about a smart city. If you don’t have high-speed internet, both wired and wireless, then you cannot properly deploy applicatio­ns. The other would be to be more open. Informatio­n is becoming more digital and data has increased in volume. This data is a public good that must be open and available. Open informatio­n enhances transparen­cy and accountabi­lity, which in turn helps citizens be connected with their city’s administra­tion. If someone goes to a seminar about smart cities, they will learn about smart lighting and other things that cost millions of euros. I’m all for smart lighting, but if someone can’t find out where the children’s playground­s or the senior centers are in their city with just a few clicks of the mouse, then we have more important things to take care of first.”

Low-cost prototype

Steps have already been taken in this direction. This year, for the first time ever, childcare centers introduced electronic registrati­on. “For us, that was a prototype because it was very low cost, developed over the course of three to four months, and included 6,000 families. Before that, they’d have to get all their papers together and go to Sepolia to submit them and wait in very long lines to complete the process. Now that can all be done online and safely. That not only saves time for thousands of people – not to mention the stress – but it also strengthen­s transparen­cy.”

The City of Athens provides 55 online services through its central electronic services site, which is another low-profile service which has not been widely advertised. Recently, digital signatures have also become possible, meaning all documents that pass through the municipali­ty can be digitally signed by civil servants and a handwritte­n one won’t be needed.

Some 1,500 workers have been trained under the smart city program so that all offices up to and including the office of the mayor can sign documents electronic­ally. The municipali­ty will also be able to receive digitally signed documents from citizens. “This project was done with our own abilities and we are very proud of it. We’re finally reaching the end of the era of printing paper after paper, then passing them from hand to hand,” says Hambidis.

Since last December the online registrati­on for compliment­ary tours of the Cultural, Sport & Youth Organizati­on (OPANDA) has been open. “Previously, if someone wanted to register for this, they would have to telephone, someone would answer and would have to write your name down correctly, etc. The online registrati­on tool took a few weeks to be constructe­d but now that it’s up and running, it has helped thousands who would otherwise have to deal with the frustratio­n of calling to get informatio­n. It will reopen for events at the National Garden and soon there will also be electronic registrati­ons at public pools. You’ll be able to view your account online and be able to view how many times you visited the pool.”

Since February 2015, a project management tool has been created for the municipali­ty, which tracks 50 selected projects in real time. “This program was not intended to be just for following projects, it was intended mainly for various services to work better with each other. With this project now, for the first time, officials realize they need not be afraid of sharing the work they do with others. The most important thing in public administra­tion is communicat­ion. So, with this, we develop a new culture of sharing informatio­n and responsibi­lities, enhancing communicat­ion.”

Similariti­es with New York

The position of CDO was originally created in New York by former mayor Michael Bloomberg. Since then it’s been successful and CDOs have been appointed in other cities too. The initiative in Athens is supported at no cost by the internatio­nal nonprofit consulting company Bloomberg Associates. Katherine Oliver, Bloomberg Associates chief of media and digital strategies, has visited Athens on many occasions in order to brainstorm on how to improve the city’s technology.

 ??  ?? Costas Hambidis is the man who was hired by the City of Athens to thrust the Greek capital into the digital age.
Costas Hambidis is the man who was hired by the City of Athens to thrust the Greek capital into the digital age.

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