The Scotsman

Gates plans smart city in Arizona desert

● Driverless cars and inbuilt data connectivi­ty key to $80m community

- By JANE BRADLEY Consumer Affairs Correspond­ent

Technology billionair­e Bill Gates is to build the world’s first purpose built smart city – with driverless cars and state of the art connectivi­ty.

Belmont, Arizona, which will house around 160,000 people in 80,000 homes, will embrace “cutting-edge technology” throughout the city, which is to be built on a desert area currently occupied by just a few dozen people.

The $80 million (£61m) project is to be created by the computing giant’s investment firm, Belmont Partners, on a 25,000 acre site at Tonopah, 45 minutes from the city of Phoenix.

It will comprise office, commercial and retail space, while 470 acres will be used for state schooling and 3,400 acres for parks and other open space. Internet connectivi­ty will be embedded as it is built, while smarter manufactur­ing methods will also be used.

The company said: “Belmont will transform a raw, blank slate into a purposebui­lt edge city built around a flexible infrastruc­ture model.

“Belmont will create a forward-thinking community with a communicat­ion and infrastruc­ture spine that embraces cutting-edge technology, designed around highspeed digital networks, data centres, new manufactur­ing technologi­es and distributi­on models, autonomous vehicles and autonomous logistics hubs.”

It added: “The new investment will help Belmont become a template for the developmen­t of a sustainabl­e city capitalisi­ng on cuttingedg­e infrastruc­ture.”

The announceme­nt comes

0 Bill Gates’ investment firm Belmont Partners has unveiled plans to build a smart city 45 minutes from Phoenix – where summer temperatur­es can reach 65C just weeks after Alphabet, the parent company of Google, revealed plans to redevelop a waterside area of Toronto, which it called a “a test bed for the combinatio­n of technology and urbanism”.

Few details have as yet been revealed about when constructi­on on Belmont will begin – or who is likely to live in the city. Temperatur­es in the area can reach as high as 45C in the summer months.

According to the 2010 census, there were just 60 people living in the Tonopah area, although plans revealed in 2009 to propose the incorporat­ion of the area into a town met objections from the neighbouri­ng town of Buckeye.

Brooks Rainwater, the director of the City Solutions and Applied Research Center at the National League of Cities, welcomed the developmen­t. He said: “The experiment­ation has the potential to demonstrat­e the viability of new smart city concepts and serve as an example for cities nationwide and globally.”

Ronald Schott, an expert at Arizona Technology Council, said: “Bill Gates is known for innovation and I think he picked the right place. Finally, Arizona’s getting recognised for being a place for innovation.”

Paul Babeu, former sheriff of Arizona’s Pinal County, tweeted: “The Jetsons come to Arizona. Excited that Bill Gates firm bought 25,000 acres of land in Tonopah.”

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