Smart City Gnosys

Smart city article details

Title Mobility And Health In The Smart City 3.0: Trends And Innovations In Italian Context
ID_Doc 37337
Authors Garau C.; Desogus G.; Annunziata A.; Mighela F.
Year 2023
Published Smart Cities and Digital Transformation: Empowering Communities, Limitless Innovation, Sustainable Development and the Next Generation
DOI http://dx.doi.org/10.1108/978-1-80455-994-920231006
Abstract The smart city paradigm has evolved from a perspective focused on technological infrastructures to an approach in which the effects of the technological apparatus improve the quality of life of people, urban resilience, urban sustainability, and health, by introducing the concept of smart and sustainable city 3.0. In this chapter, the authors evaluate mobility as a key aspect of improving the environmental, social, and economic well-being of communities under the central concept of smart and sustainable city 3.0. To this end, the authors underline the link between mobility, the Sustainable Urban Mobility Plans (SUMP), and environmental health. Then, the authors outline (i) the mobility requirements to be met from a smart perspective on environmental health and how (ii) the SUMPs can be considered as the basic tool for connecting smartness with mobility and environmental health. Finally, the results obtained will be discussed, and future directions of this research will be illustrated. © 2023 by Chiara Garau, Giulia Desogus, Alfonso Annunziata, and Francesca Mighela Published under exclusive licence by Emerald Publishing Limited. All rights reservesd.
Author Keywords Healthy cities; Italian metropolitan cities; Smart city paradigm; Smart sustainable cities; Smart sustainable mobility; Sustainable urban mobility plans


Similar Articles


Id Similarity Authors Title Published
53990 View0.886Müller-Eie D.; Kosmidis I.Sustainable Mobility In Smart Cities: A Document Study Of Mobility Initiatives Of Mid-Sized Nordic Smart CitiesEuropean Transport Research Review, 15, 1 (2023)
6125 View0.882Krasowska, KE; Szewczenko, A; Rozalowska, BActive Mobility In The Smart City Concept Implemented By Polish CitiesTEKA KOMISJI URBANISTYKI I ARCHITEKTURY, 51 (2023)
37362 View0.879Trombin M.; Pinna R.; Musso M.; Magnaghi E.; De Marco M.Mobility Management: From Traditional To People-Centric Approach In The Smart CityStudies in Systems, Decision and Control, 242 (2020)
29504 View0.878Modarelli G.; Sadraei R.; Rainero C.How To Perceive Sustainable Moving And Smart Mobility Today?: A Cross-National Comparative Longitudinal Perspective And The Controversy Of Alternative Transport SystemsJournal of Cleaner Production, 468 (2024)
49988 View0.878Dameri R.P.Smart City And Ict. Shaping Urban Space For Better Quality Of LifeLecture Notes in Information Systems and Organisation, 15 (2016)
19415 View0.877Papageorgiou G.N.; Tsappi E.Developing A Sustainable Active Mobility Framework Model For Smart CitiesSpringer Tracts on Transportation and Traffic, 21 (2024)
25765 View0.877Geropanta V.; Karagianni A.; Mavroudi S.; Parthenios P.Exploring The Relationship Between The Smart-Sustainable City, Well-Being, And Urban Planning: An Analysis Of Current Approaches In EuropeSmart Cities and the UN SDGs (2021)
54028 View0.875Lorenz A.; Madeja N.; Leyh C.Sustainable Smart Cities: A Comprehensive Framework For Sustainability Assessment Of Intelligent Transport SystemsLecture Notes in Business Information Processing, 504 LNBIP (2024)
24200 View0.875Hong A.; Choi D.-A.; Chung H.; Kumar P.; Lee J.Environmental And Health Monitoring In Smart Cities: A Systematic Review Of Trends, Opportunities, And ChallengesSustainable Cities and Society, 130 (2025)
50242 View0.874Russo F.; Rindone C.Smart City For Sustainable Development: Applied Processes From Sump To Maas At European LevelApplied Sciences (Switzerland), 13, 3 (2023)