Smart Technologies for Resilient and Sustainable Cities: Comparing Tier 1 and Tier 2 Approaches in Australia
Abstract
:1. Introduction
- Tier 1: Major metropolitan centres such as Sydney, Melbourne, and Brisbane are often equipped with substantial resources and robust digital infrastructures.
2. Literature Review
2.1. Smart Technologies as Enablers of Urban Resilience
- Digital equity involves ensuring that all residents, not just affluent or tech-savvy groups, can access and benefit from digital services [2]. Where these issues are unaddressed, smart city agendas risk reproducing social inequalities rather than alleviating them.
2.2. Australian Smart City Initiatives Across Governance Tiers
2.3. Key Implementation Challenges
2.4. From “Smart” to “Resilient”: Theoretical Convergence
2.5. Comparative Urbanism and the Tiered Lens
2.6. Identified Research Gaps
- Comparative Analyses: Few studies systematically compare Tier 1 and Tier 2 smart city strategies, which limits our understanding of how context-specific factors (e.g., governance scale, resource capacity) influence adaptation and scalability [27].
- Resilience Outcomes: Empirical evaluation remains limited, leaving unanswered questions about whether city size influences long-term preparedness, social equity, or the success of disaster management [3].
- Innovation in Smaller Cities: Mid-sized municipalities often lack thorough exploration in academic and policy debates, overshadowed by the emphasis on large metropolitan centres. Nevertheless, these smaller cities may function as vital “innovation labs,” particularly in relation to digital equity and local co-design [20].
3. Materials and Methods
3.1. Rationale for Tier-Based Classification
3.2. Case Selection
- Presence of Explicit Frameworks: Cities have published strategic documents referencing IoT, AI, or broader digital innovation.
- Documented Initiatives: Strategies or policy programmes included reports on tangible pilot projects or outcomes.
- Governance Diversity: Selected cases captured a mix of large metropolitan areas (Tier 1) and smaller or regional centres (Tier 2) to facilitate comparative analysis of governance complexity and resource allocation.
3.3. Data Collection
3.4. Data Analysis
- Initial Coding Framework: The study’s research question and related literature on smart cities and urban resilience informed the development of five primary codes: (1) governance structures, (2) community engagement, (3) resilience and sustainability, (4) funding mechanisms, and (5) implementation challenges.
- Emergent Sub-Themes: As coding progressed, new subcategories emerged inductively (e.g., stakeholder collaboration, digital equity, and pilot scalability). These were incorporated into the coding tree to capture nuanced variations across city documents.
- Iterative Refinement: The coding schema was refined through repeated reviews to ensure consistency and clarity [29]. Where possible, reliability checks were conducted by having a second researcher cross-check a subset of coded materials, resolving discrepancies through discussion and consensus.
3.5. Phase 1: Individual City Analysis
3.6. Phase 2: Comparative Synthesis
3.7. Limitations and Scope
4. Results
4.1. Technological Integration and Resource Allocation
4.1.1. Tier 1 Cities
4.1.2. Tier 2 Cities
4.2. Governance and Policy
4.2.1. Tier 1 Cities
4.2.2. Tier 2 Cities
4.3. Community Engagement and Equity
4.3.1. Tier 1 Cities
4.3.2. Tier 2 Cities
4.4. Resilience and Sustainability
4.4.1. Tier 1 Cities
4.4.2. Tier 2 Cities
4.5. Cross-Tier Synthesis
5. Discussion
5.1. Multi-Level Governance and Policy Alignment
- National (Federal): Offer multi-year funding cycles and clear frameworks that promote local innovation, whilst maintaining consistent nationwide standards.
- State/Territory: Align urban development policies with federal smart city objectives and promote collaborations among local councils to share best practices.
- Local Councils: Adopt flexible governance processes to adapt pilot programmes, foster community partnerships, and ensure that digital innovation responds to real-world realities.
5.2. Inclusivity, Resilience, and Sustainability
- Bridging the Digital Divide: While Tier 1 programmes (e.g., city-wide Wi-Fi) can have a broad reach, Tier 2 initiatives often achieve rapid, targeted impacts, such as delivering internet hotspots or literacy workshops to at-risk neighbourhoods [21,39]. Both approaches demonstrate the importance of tailoring digital inclusion strategies to meet local demographic needs.
- Environmental Stewardship: Real-time monitoring of resources such as water and air quality alongside integrated climate preparedness for bushfires and alerts to flood detection are common features in both tiers, showcasing a commitment to linking technology deployment with ecological resilience [3].
- Community-Led Processes: Tier 2 cities demonstrate how co-design and face-to-face engagement can anchor technology deployments in residents’ lived realities, fostering greater trust and adoption. The larger Tier 1 councils conduct extensive consultations but may have difficulty capturing hyper-local issues in surveys that cover the entire city.
5.3. From Incremental Innovations to Transformative Futures
Balancing the Two Paradigms
5.4. Implications for Sustainable, Resilient, and Citizen-Centric Urban Development
- Policy Coordination: Federal and state bodies could streamline grant mechanisms designed for mid-sized cities, ensuring that successful local solutions can be scaled up.
- Capacity-Building: Workshops, training, and inter-city collaborations can assist smaller councils in sharing best practices, thereby reducing dependence on short-term or ad hoc funding cycles.
- Governance Frameworks: Clear mandates for inclusive community engagement can prevent technology-led projects from worsening socio-economic disparities.
- Strengthening Urban Resilience:
- Adaptive Funding: Multi-year grants and consistent policy directions can assist Tier 1 in sustaining broad-based transformation while enabling Tier 2 to extend the successes of pilot programmes into systemic resilience strategies.
- Interjurisdictional Collaboration: Mechanisms for cross-council learning, such as data sharing and collaborative cloud platforms, can amplify the impact of local innovations.
5.5. Connection to Broader Theories and Global Applicability
5.6. Future Research Directions
6. Conclusions
Author Contributions
Funding
Institutional Review Board Statement
Informed Consent Statement
Data Availability Statement
Conflicts of Interest
Appendix A
City Tier | City/Document | Document Title | Reference |
---|---|---|---|
Tier 1 | Sydney | Smart City Strategic Framework—Draft | [31] |
Tier 1 | Sydney | Resilient Sydney (2018) | [43] |
Tier 1 | North Sydney | Smart City Action Plan (2019/20–2021/22) | [48] |
Tier 1 | City of Melbourne | Resilient Melbourne Strategy (2016) | [49] |
Tier 1 | Stonnington, Melbourne | Smart City Strategic Framework | [50] |
Tier 1 | Casey, Melbourne | Smart Casey Launchpad (Dec 2020; 2021–2025 horizon) | [45] |
Tier 1 | Maribyrnong, Melbourne | A Smart City for Smart Communities (Apr 2022) | [33] |
Tier 1 | Wyndham, Melbourne | Smart City Strategy 2019–2024 | [32] |
Tier 1 | Brisbane | Smart, Connected Brisbane Framework | [30] |
Tier 1 | Adelaide | Smart Cities Framework for Metropolitan Adelaide | [42] |
Tier 2 | Geelong | Resilient Geelong (Nov 2020) | [44] |
Tier 2 | Sunshine Coast | Smart City Framework & Implementation Plan | [38] |
Tier 2 | Darwin | Smart Darwin Strategy (#SmartDarwin) | [40] |
Tier 2 | Hobart | Connected Hobart Smart City Framework | [39] |
Tier 2 | Newcastle | Smart City Strategy 2017–2021 | [37] |
Tier 2 | Geelong | The City of Greater Geelong Smart City Strategic Framework | [41] |
Appendix B
Aspect | City |
---|---|
Preliminary Overview
| |
Purpose and Objectives | |
Contextual Background | |
Content Analysis
| |
Comparative Analysis (if analysing multiple documents) | |
Critical Analysis | |
Resilience and Smart City Indicators:
| |
Implementation and Monitoring | |
Broader Implications | |
Conclusion and Recommendations |
Appendix C
Theme | Sydney | Brisbane | Geelong | Other Cities |
---|---|---|---|---|
Technological Integration | ||||
Policy and Governance | ||||
Community Engagement | ||||
Resilience and Sustainability Goals | ||||
Implementation Challenges | ||||
Technological Initiatives | ||||
Challenges and Opportunities |
Appendix D
City (Tier) | Technological Integration | Policy and Governance | Community Engagement | Resilience and Sustainability Goals | Implementation Challenges | Examples of Initiatives | Challenges and Opportunities |
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Sydney (Tier 1)Smart City Strategic Framework |
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| Challenges:
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North Sydney (Tier 1) Smart City Action Plan and Smart City Strategy |
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| Challenges:
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Brisbane (Tier 1) Smart, Connected Brisbane Framework |
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| Challenges:
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Adelaide (Tier 1) Smart Cities Framework for Metropolitan Adelaide |
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| Challenges:
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Melbourne/City of Stonnington (Tier 1) Smart City Strategic Framework |
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| Challenges:
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Melbourne/City of Casey (Tier 1) Smart Casey Launchpad |
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| Challenges:
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Melbourne/Maribyrnong (Tier 1) Smart Cities Maribyrnong |
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| Challenges:
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Melbourne/Wyndham (Tier 1) Smart City Strategy |
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Newcastle (Tier 2) Smart City Strategy |
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| Challenges:
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Geelong (Tier 2) Smart City Strategic Framework |
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Hobart (Tier 2) Connected Hobart Smart City Framework, Smart Cities Action Plan |
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| Challenges:
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Sunshine Coast (Tier 2) Smart City Framework and Implementation Plan |
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| Challenges:
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Darwin (Tier 2) Smart Darwin Strategy |
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| Challenges:
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Dimension | Tier 1 Cities (Major Metropolitan) | Tier 2 Cities (Mid-Sized/Regional) |
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Level of Innovation |
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Scale of Projects |
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Governance Complexity |
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Community Engagement |
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Funding and Resources |
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Implementation Speed |
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Resilience and Sustainability |
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City (Tier) | Key Smart Initiative | Main Challenge | Outcome/Opportunity |
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Sydney (T1) |
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Adelaide (T1) |
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Darwin (T2) |
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Sunshine Coast (T2) |
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Casey (T1) |
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Geelong (T2) |
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Share and Cite
Varzeshi, S.; Fien, J.; Irajifar, L. Smart Technologies for Resilient and Sustainable Cities: Comparing Tier 1 and Tier 2 Approaches in Australia. Sustainability 2025, 17, 5485. https://doi.org/10.3390/su17125485
Varzeshi S, Fien J, Irajifar L. Smart Technologies for Resilient and Sustainable Cities: Comparing Tier 1 and Tier 2 Approaches in Australia. Sustainability. 2025; 17(12):5485. https://doi.org/10.3390/su17125485
Chicago/Turabian StyleVarzeshi, Shabnam, John Fien, and Leila Irajifar. 2025. "Smart Technologies for Resilient and Sustainable Cities: Comparing Tier 1 and Tier 2 Approaches in Australia" Sustainability 17, no. 12: 5485. https://doi.org/10.3390/su17125485
APA StyleVarzeshi, S., Fien, J., & Irajifar, L. (2025). Smart Technologies for Resilient and Sustainable Cities: Comparing Tier 1 and Tier 2 Approaches in Australia. Sustainability, 17(12), 5485. https://doi.org/10.3390/su17125485