Muutke küpsiste eelistusi

E-raamat: Intelligent Environments: Advanced Systems for a Healthy Planet

Edited by (Director, Liechtenstein Institute for Strategic Development;
President, Eurosolar, European Association of Renewable Energy; and
General Chairman, World Council for Renewable Energy)
  • Formaat: PDF+DRM
  • Ilmumisaeg: 05-Dec-2022
  • Kirjastus: North-Holland
  • Keel: eng
  • ISBN-13: 9780128202487
  • Formaat - PDF+DRM
  • Hind: 232,05 €*
  • * hind on lõplik, st. muud allahindlused enam ei rakendu
  • Lisa ostukorvi
  • Lisa soovinimekirja
  • See e-raamat on mõeldud ainult isiklikuks kasutamiseks. E-raamatuid ei saa tagastada.
  • Formaat: PDF+DRM
  • Ilmumisaeg: 05-Dec-2022
  • Kirjastus: North-Holland
  • Keel: eng
  • ISBN-13: 9780128202487

DRM piirangud

  • Kopeerimine (copy/paste):

    ei ole lubatud

  • Printimine:

    ei ole lubatud

  • Kasutamine:

    Digitaalõiguste kaitse (DRM)
    Kirjastus on väljastanud selle e-raamatu krüpteeritud kujul, mis tähendab, et selle lugemiseks peate installeerima spetsiaalse tarkvara. Samuti peate looma endale  Adobe ID Rohkem infot siin. E-raamatut saab lugeda 1 kasutaja ning alla laadida kuni 6'de seadmesse (kõik autoriseeritud sama Adobe ID-ga).

    Vajalik tarkvara
    Mobiilsetes seadmetes (telefon või tahvelarvuti) lugemiseks peate installeerima selle tasuta rakenduse: PocketBook Reader (iOS / Android)

    PC või Mac seadmes lugemiseks peate installima Adobe Digital Editionsi (Seeon tasuta rakendus spetsiaalselt e-raamatute lugemiseks. Seda ei tohi segamini ajada Adober Reader'iga, mis tõenäoliselt on juba teie arvutisse installeeritud )

    Seda e-raamatut ei saa lugeda Amazon Kindle's. 

Digitalization permeates conversations about society’s future – ever since the 1980s when the informatization of the economy also emerged as popular urban development theme. The promises and realities of digital innovation have come to suffuse everything from government to finance, art to medicine, astronomy to cities, politics to warfare – and from genetics to reality itself. This astonishing advance presents enormous opportunities and risks. It carries with it great responsibilities.

Digital systems augmenting physical space, buildings and cities occupy a special place in the wider evolutionary discourse about advanced technology. The two Intelligent Environments books edited by Peter Droege span a quarter of a century across this genre. The second volume, Intelligent Environments: Advanced Systems for a Healthy Planet, goes further than the first and asks: how does civilization approach thinking systems, and more specifically intelligent spatial models, design methods and support structures that are designed or applied for spatial sustainability, in ways that could even counteract current challenges to terrestrial habitability?

The result of this quest is useful, practical, and informative: it opens a door to what must now become a rapidly growing and overarching existential focus. This book presents a range of practical, typical, systemic but also unusual and even sublime ideas and initiatives to regenerate a sustainable world freed from the dogma of blind development: innovation without societal purpose. These are visible in endeavors as diverse as the planned guidance of industrial change across regions, currency innovation, infrastructure architecture, network protocols of energy transaction, geodesign, net-positive design, remote work, integrated transport - or notions of artificial intelligence in understanding our most immediate spatial setting: the human body.

    • Utilizes a cross-disciplinary approach to exploring intelligence-enhanced sustainability systems
    • A fully updated and reorganized edition that is alphabetically and topically structured, hyperlinked, and cross-referenced with extended entries that are consistently structured for ease of discovery and access
    • Focuses on spatial support technologies and information systems for enabling human survival and protecting planetary biospheric webs and diversity
    • Includes links to animations, maps, diagrams, and videos to enhance understanding
    Contributor biographies xv
    Preface xxiii
    Chapter 1 Intelligent environments 2---Advanced systems for a healthy planet
    1(32)
    Peter Droege
    1 Intelligent environments in transition
    1(5)
    2 The rise of intelligent environments: early inklings
    6(15)
    3 The regenerative earth decade: intelligent environments for a habitable planet
    21(6)
    4 The case for an intelligent planetary support environment
    27(1)
    5 Conclusion
    28(5)
    References
    29(4)
    Chapter 2 The Ruhr innovation ecosystem---From industrial brownfields to regenerative smart environments
    33(54)
    Anis Radzi
    1 Climate change and urban infrastructure transformations
    33(2)
    2 The Ruhr Metropolis innovation ecosystem
    35(41)
    3 Innovation ecosystems for regional structural change
    76(7)
    4 References
    83(4)
    References
    84(3)
    Chapter 3 Triangulum: the three point project---findings from one of the first EU smart city projects
    87(22)
    Trinidad Fernandez
    Sonja Stoffler
    Catalina Diaz
    1 European social cohesion, climate, urban innovation, and industrial development aims/H2020 and the green deal
    87(2)
    2 The European Union (EU) initiatives on smart cities: innovation, resilience, climate change mitigation
    89(2)
    3 The role of Triangulum
    91(1)
    4 Aims and scope
    92(1)
    5 Participating cities and their expectations
    93(1)
    6 Leading technologies and their purpose
    94(1)
    7 Expected outcomes and success measures
    95(2)
    8 Case study: Eindhoven
    97(3)
    9 Cooperation process and interaction
    100(3)
    10 Outcomes and legacies of the project
    103(1)
    11 Learning from Triangulum
    104(5)
    References
    106(1)
    Further Reading
    107(2)
    Chapter 4 Transactive electricity: how decentralized renewable power can support security, resilience and decarbonization
    109(42)
    Jemma Green
    Peter Newman
    Peter Droege
    1 Introduction
    109(5)
    2 The security and resilience challenge
    114(2)
    3 The dispatchability deficit and transactive energy
    116(4)
    4 Decentralization of price---from FIT to transactive electricity storage
    120(2)
    5 Decentralizing and distributing the grid: optimizing digital technology with a purpose
    122(2)
    6 How does the distributed, transactive electricity grid work?
    124(4)
    7 Market mechanisms for a distributed, transactive electricity grid
    128(9)
    8 Emerging roles for entrepreneurs in the decentralized, transactive electricity grid
    137(3)
    9 Deregulation and reregulation for a distributed, transactive electricity grid
    140(5)
    10 Conclusion
    145(1)
    11 Short glossary of terms
    146(5)
    Acknowledgments
    146(1)
    References
    146(3)
    Further Reading
    149(2)
    Chapter 5 Community inclusion currencies
    151(24)
    William O. Ruddick
    1 Introduction
    151(2)
    2 Real world applications
    153(5)
    3 Currencies and blockchains
    158(7)
    4 Methodology
    165(7)
    5 Pay it forward
    172(3)
    Glossary
    173(1)
    Acknowledgments
    173(1)
    References
    173(2)
    Chapter 6 Managing uncertainty/making miracles: understanding and strategizing for unpredictable outcomes in the implementation of intelligent government
    175(18)
    Keith Guzik
    Gary T. Marx
    1 Introduction
    175(1)
    2 The uncertainty principle
    176(5)
    3 Case studies
    181(5)
    4 Lessons
    186(7)
    References
    191(2)
    Chapter 7 Geodesign to address global change
    193(50)
    Carl Steinitz
    Brian Orland
    Tom Fisher
    Michele Campagna
    1 Introduction: the global challenge
    193(1)
    2 Geodesign and sustainable development
    194(1)
    3 Strategic planning for significant change
    195(2)
    4 Organizing geodesign
    197(2)
    5 Collaborative negotiation as a geodesign method
    199(2)
    6 Technology in support of geodesign
    201(2)
    7 Strategic planning for global change: the International Geodesign Collaboration
    203(1)
    8 The IGC conventions: a common "language" for geodesign
    204(7)
    9 Two IGC case studies
    211(1)
    10 The CAMKOX corridor: rethinking the growth of the London region
    211(10)
    11 The Minneapolis Green New Deal: the effect of policy on place
    221(3)
    12 Early adopter scenario
    224(2)
    13 Late adopter scenario
    226(1)
    14 Nonadopter scenario
    227(2)
    15 How IGC studies have applied geodesign globally
    229(5)
    16 Conclusion: Geodesign in global public practice
    234(9)
    Acknowledgments
    240(1)
    References
    240(2)
    Further Reading
    242(1)
    Chapter 8 Smart working and flexible work arrangements: opportunities and risks for sustainable communities
    243(42)
    R. Roberto
    M. Penna
    B. Felici
    M. Rao
    1 Introduction
    243(2)
    2 Telework and smart work: definitions and main features
    245(2)
    3 Moving from tackling life-work balance toward a novel work organization
    247(8)
    4 Contribution of smart working to the quality of the urban environment
    255(16)
    5 Smart-working in the context of pandemic and postpandemic scenarios
    271(2)
    6 Perspectives on the transformative potential of smart working
    273(12)
    References
    276(9)
    Chapter 9 Intelligent spatial technologies for gender inclusive urban environments in today's smart cities
    285(38)
    Sophia German
    Graciela Metternicht
    Shawn Laffan
    Scott Hawken
    1 Introduction
    285(9)
    2 Methodological framework
    294(4)
    3 Results: literature and practice-based
    298(10)
    4 Discussion
    308(9)
    5 Conclusion
    317(6)
    References
    318(5)
    Chapter 10 Toward an intelligent mobility regime
    323(28)
    Stephen Potter
    James Warren
    Miguel Valdez
    Matthew Cook
    1 Overview
    323(1)
    2 Transport's sustainability challenge
    324(3)
    3 Key structural trends behind travel behaviors
    327(1)
    4 Realizing the potential of intelligent mobilities
    328(3)
    5 A multi-level perspective analysis
    331(2)
    6 Niche innovations and regime change in public transport
    333(4)
    7 The four types of intelligent mobility innovation
    337(3)
    8 Getting from A to B---a framework for systemic transformation
    340(1)
    9 Think big, start small---niche seeds of a system redesign
    341(4)
    10 Exploring and supporting transition paths
    345(6)
    References
    348(3)
    Chapter 11 Autonomous mobility in the built environment
    351(44)
    Nimish Biloria
    1 Introduction
    351(1)
    2 Overview of the autonomous vehicle sector
    352(13)
    3 Autonomous vehicles and sustainability
    365(7)
    4 Four urban pillars for defining a sustainable future with autonomous vehicles
    372(12)
    5 Conclusion
    384(11)
    References
    388(7)
    Chapter 12 Smart building and district retrofitting for intelligent urban environments
    395(26)
    Borragan Guillermo
    Verheyen Jan
    Vandevyvere Han
    Kondratenko Irena
    1 Current scope of smart retrofitting
    395(4)
    2 Will energy digitalization and data services foster smart renovation?
    399(8)
    3 Building renovation impact on cities' sustainability and resilience: a step toward a healthier urban environment
    407(8)
    4 Perspectives and recommendations
    415(6)
    References
    416(4)
    Further Reading
    420(1)
    Chapter 13 Scale matters: exploiting cross-scale interactions for a smart and sustainable built environment
    421(26)
    Ahmed Khoja
    1 Introduction
    421(1)
    2 Cross-scaling: exploiting the benefits of multiscale considerations in building renovations
    422(5)
    3 Overcoming the cross-scale transition barriers: from theory to practice
    427(13)
    4 Discussion and outlook: finding a scale to fit
    440(7)
    Acknowledgment
    442(1)
    References
    443(4)
    Chapter 14 Ontologically streamlined data for building design and operation support
    447(28)
    Ardeshir Mahdavi
    Dawid Wolosiuk
    1 Introduction
    447(1)
    2 Building performance data (BPD)
    448(1)
    3 Building performance indicators
    449(2)
    4 Ontological schema for building performance data
    451(2)
    5 From data to application
    453(6)
    6 BPD ontology implementation
    459(3)
    7 Sustainably technology configuration support: an illustrative case study of ontologized data utilization
    462(9)
    8 Conclusions
    471(4)
    References
    472(3)
    Chapter 15 Digital City Science---a platform methodology for sustainable urban development
    475(24)
    Jbrg Rainer Noennig
    Jan Barski
    Katharina Borgmann
    Jesus Lopez Baeza
    1 City science approaches in urban research
    475(4)
    2 Principles, methods, and technologies
    479(3)
    3 Convergence with urban sustainability
    482(4)
    4 Sample studies and projects
    486(6)
    5 Outlook: a new paradigm?
    492(7)
    References
    495(2)
    Further Reading
    497(2)
    Chapter 16 A software tool for net-positive urban design and architecture
    499(32)
    Janis Birkeland
    1 Introduction
    499(5)
    2 How STARfish differs from rating tools
    504(12)
    3 How STARfish differs from lifecycle assessment
    516(6)
    4 Unique structure of STARfish
    522(4)
    5 Discussion and outlook
    526(5)
    References
    528(3)
    Chapter 17 Strategies to improve energy efficiency in residential buildings in Ambon, Indonesia
    531(1)
    Dieter D. Genske
    Abdelrahman M.H. Ammar
    1 Introduction
    531(1)
    2 Methodology
    532(1)
    3 Results
    533(12)
    4 Discussion
    545(4)
    5 Conclusion
    549(1)
    References
    549(4)
    Chapter 18 Transactive electricity markets: case study RENeW Nexus
    553(1)
    Jemma Green
    Peter Newman
    Nick Forse
    1 Introduction
    553(1)
    2 Research question
    554(1)
    3 Background
    555(4)
    4 The project: RENeW Nexus---a study of localized transactive, electricity markets
    559(2)
    5 Methodology
    561(6)
    6 Results
    567(15)
    7 Loco 1
    582(3)
    8 Conclusions
    585(6)
    Glossary
    586(1)
    References
    587(2)
    Further Reading
    589(2)
    Chapter 19 The Insight Engine 2.0: the body and biomimetic systems as intelligent environments
    591(28)
    Bill Seaman
    Quran Karriem
    Dev Seth
    Hojung Ashley Kwon
    John Herr
    1 The body as intelligent environment
    591(4)
    2 The Neosentient model environment
    595(2)
    3 The enacted, embodied, embedded, extended approach, abstracted via biomimetics
    597(2)
    4 Embodied computation
    599(1)
    5 The Insight Engine 2.0---focusing on the production of a model for neosentience
    600(1)
    6 Bisociation and poly-association
    601(1)
    7 Some visualization strategies in the Insight Engine 2.0
    602(2)
    8 The World Generator 2.0---programming by Quran Karriem
    604(1)
    9 Initial research areas for the Insight Engine 2.0
    605(1)
    10 Two different approaches to Neosentience---one top down (Rossler), one bottom up (Seaman)
    606(1)
    11 A new combinatorial n-dimensional bioalgorithm
    607(1)
    12 Why n-dimensional?
    608(1)
    13 Ethics and redefining notions of bias
    608(2)
    14 The scope of the research
    610(3)
    15 Conclusion
    613(6)
    References
    615(2)
    Further Reading
    617(2)
    Index 619
    Professor Droege directs the Liechtenstein Institute for Strategic Development, and is President, Eurosolar and General Chairman, World Council for Renewable Energy. He initiated the Chair for Sustainable Spatial Development at the University of Liechtenstein while holding a Conjoint Professorship at the Faculty of Engineering, University of Newcastle, Australia. An inaugural member of the Zayed Future Energy Prize jury and Expert Commissioner at the World Future Council he served on the Steering Committee of the Urban Climate Change Research Network at the Goddard Institute for Space Studies and CUNY. He taught and researched at MIT, held an Endowed Chair in Urban Engineering at at Tokyo Universitys Research Center for Advanced Science and Technology, and Chair of Urban Design at Sydney University. He has authored/edited eight books.