Smart City Gnosys

Smart city article details

Title Sidewalk Toronto And The Discursive Politics Of The Real-Time City
ID_Doc 48740
Authors Olmstead N.A.
Year 2025
Published Time and Society
DOI http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/0961463X251333857
Abstract As communities around the world invest in new digital technologies, many are guided by enthusiasm for what Rob Kitchin calls ‘the real-time city’. From connected traffic lights that adjust to the flow of vehicles to digital platforms that allow residents to track snowplows in their area, these ‘smart city’ technologies promise ‘real-time’ updates and ‘real-time’ control. But what does it mean for a technology or a city to operate in ‘real-time’, and what is the relationship between ‘real-time’ and the utility or intelligence of digital systems? What does excitement over ‘real-time’ overlook? To answer these questions, this paper explores the discursive function of ‘real-time’ within the context of Sidewalk Toronto, Canada's most prominent foray into smart city development. Drawing on the project's initial proposal and subsequent development plan, it suggests that the discursive function of ‘real-time’ was threefold. First, references to ‘real-time’ affirmed the immediacy or objectivity of ‘smart city’ technologies. Second, enthusiasm for ‘real-time’ affirmed the objectification and commodification of time itself. Third, references to ‘real-time’ aided in the de-contextualization and de-politicization of algorithmic decision-making, collapsing urban governance into a ‘perpetual present’ in which ‘real-time’ constituted no time (or space) at all. The paper closes by exploring the politics of this ‘real-time city’, and the hierarchical and technocratic forms of governance that characterized the Sidewalk Toronto project. © The Author(s) 2025.
Author Keywords digital governance; local government; real-time; smart cities; urban technology


Similar Articles


Id Similarity Authors Title Published
43350 View0.883Tello, AMProgram And Govern. Technological-Political Disputes In The Era Of Smart CitiesARBOR-CIENCIA PENSAMIENTO Y CULTURA, 198, 803 (2022)
60 View0.882Mouton, M; Burns, R(Digital) Neo-Colonialism In The Smart CityREGIONAL STUDIES, 55, 12 (2021)
25340 View0.878Rodó, MTExperimenting With The Urban: Politics, Discourses And Practices Of The Smart City And DatificationATHENEA DIGITAL, 19, 2 (2019)
44533 View0.878Förster N.; Schubert G.; Petzold F.Rebugging The Smart City Design Explorations Of Digital Urban InfrastructureProceedings of the International Conference on Computer-Aided Architectural Design Research in Asia (2022)
33183 View0.877Burns R.; Welker P.Interstitiality In The Smart City: More Than Top-Down And Bottom-Up SmartnessUrban Studies, 60, 2 (2023)
49430 View0.876Kitchin R.; Lauriault T.P.; McArdle G.Smart Cities And The Politics Of Urban DataSmart Urbanism: Utopian vision or false dawn? (2015)
37767 View0.876Sadowski, J; Maalsen, SModes Of Making Smart Cities: Or, Practices Of Variegated Smart UrbanismTELEMATICS AND INFORMATICS, 55 (2020)
13294 View0.875Aurigi A.Can Neighbourhoods Save The Smart City?Built Environment, 50, 1 (2024)
60111 View0.875Cook M.; Karvonen A.Urban Planning And The Knowledge Politics Of The Smart CityUrban Studies, 61, 2 (2024)
24 View0.875Mann, M; Mitchell, P; Foth, M; Anastasiu, I#Blocksidewalkto Barcelona: Technological Sovereignty And The Social License To Operate Smart CitiesJOURNAL OF THE ASSOCIATION FOR INFORMATION SCIENCE AND TECHNOLOGY, 71, 9 (2020)