Smart City Gnosys

Smart city article details

Title (Re)Producing Smart Urban Spaces: Situating Maintenance Labour And Care In Hamburg'S Fibre Optic Infrastructures
ID_Doc 66
Authors Leipert S.
Year 2025
Published Digital Geography and Society, 9
DOI http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.diggeo.2025.100135
Abstract At/in the foundation of the computational city lies its often-overlooked material infrastructures – socio-technical systems such as fibre optic cables and ducts that enable digital connectivity while remaining largely invisible within dominant technocratic visions of the smart city. This paper examines how fibre optic infrastructure shapes contemporary urban spatialities through the lens of maintenance labour and care relations in Hamburg, Germany. Drawing on ethnographic fieldwork, including participant observations and expert interviews, it reveals how telecommunications infrastructure is materially embedded in urban spaces and (re)produced through embodied practices, exposing its entanglement with wider political-economic dynamics and spatial inequalities. By foregrounding care practices and maintenance labour, the paper highlights the expertise central to sustaining digital networks while underscoring the inequities in infrastructure development and access. Blending feminist theories of care with critical urban and infrastructure studies, it argues that maintenance labour disrupts dominant imaginaries of seamless urban digitalisation, offering critical insights into more equitable approaches to urban infrastructure (re)production. In doing so, the paper contributes to (literally) grounding infrastructure debates in the embodied realities of spatial production and advocates a shift towards infrastructural futures grounded in care. © 2024
Author Keywords Digital communication networks; Fibre optic infrastructure; Infrastructure and care; Maintenance labour; Urban spatialities


Similar Articles


Id Similarity Authors Title Published
31543 View0.896Houston D.; McLean J.; Osborne N.Infrastructural Frictions: Care, Shadows, And Ruins In Multispecies Smart CitiesDesigning More-than-Human Smart Cities: Beyond Sustainability, Towards Cohabitation (2024)
14005 View0.878Marcus, L; Koch, DCities As Implements Or Facilities - The Need For A Spatial Morphology In Smart City SystemsENVIRONMENT AND PLANNING B-URBAN ANALYTICS AND CITY SCIENCE, 44, 2 (2017)
33183 View0.876Burns R.; Welker P.Interstitiality In The Smart City: More Than Top-Down And Bottom-Up SmartnessUrban Studies, 60, 2 (2023)
25067 View0.873Lynch C.R.; Sweeney M.E.Evolving Spatialities Of Digital Life: Troubling The Smart City/Home DivideDigital Geography and Society, 6 (2024)
56784 View0.873Klink J.; Tepassê Â.C.The Smart City As The Factory Of The Twenty-First Century?: How Urban Platforms Reshape The Nexus Between The Built Environment, Livelihoods, And LabourRoutledge Handbook on Labour in Construction and Human Settlements: The Built Environment at Work (2023)
44533 View0.868Förster 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)
38939 View0.868Yeo S.J.I.Negotiating Digital Urban Futures: The Limits And Possibilities Of Future-Making In SingaporeTransactions of the Institute of British Geographers, 49, 2 (2024)
58840 View0.868Guma P.K.Transforming The Smart City Ideal From The Margins: Everyday Regimes Of Labour And GovernanceTerritory, Politics, Governance (2025)
20091 View0.868Certoma C.Digital Social Innovation: Spatial Imaginaries And Technological Resistances In Urban GovernanceDigital Social Innovation: Spatial Imaginaries and Technological Resistances in Urban Governance (2021)
60023 View0.866Sepehr P.; Felt U.Urban Imaginaries As Tacit Governing Devices: The Case Of Smart City ViennaScience Technology and Human Values, 50, 2 (2025)