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Smart Cities, Volume 8, Issue 6 (December 2025) – 32 articles

Cover Story (view full-size image): This work presents a framework that integrates a real-time onboard perception module in the ego vehicle with a cloud-based digital twin to support intelligent transportation systems (ITS) in smart city environments. The perception module performs onboard 3D object detection and tracking, featuring low-latency edge-to-cloud communication and maintaining an average end-to-end delay below 0.02 s at 10 Hz. Experiments conducted on a real vehicle platform demonstrate a mean Average Precision (mAP@40) of 83.5% for the 3D perception module. The system enables real-time traffic visualization and scalable data management while minimizing communication overhead. View this paper
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24 pages, 3463 KB  
Article
Bridging the Information Gap in Smart Construction: An LLM-Based Assistant for Autonomous TBM Tunneling
by Min Hu, Hongzheng Gao, Qing Mi, Bingjian Wu, Jing Lu and Yongchang Liu
Smart Cities 2025, 8(6), 212; https://doi.org/10.3390/smartcities8060212 - 17 Dec 2025
Viewed by 646
Abstract
The development of autonomous tunneling is crucial for building the intelligent underground infrastructure that smart cities require. However, in complex urban environments, the need for frequent manual intervention during Tunnel Boring Machine (TBM) operation remains a challenge, hindering overall efficiency and safety. To [...] Read more.
The development of autonomous tunneling is crucial for building the intelligent underground infrastructure that smart cities require. However, in complex urban environments, the need for frequent manual intervention during Tunnel Boring Machine (TBM) operation remains a challenge, hindering overall efficiency and safety. To address the human–machine collaboration gap, this study analyzes practical experiences from six tunnel projects that use autonomous driving systems. Building on this foundation, we develop an intelligent assistant powered by a large language model (LLM). The assistant constructs a complete service architecture and intervention mechanism, proposes a phased intention recognition framework, and uses conversational interaction to achieve efficient human–machine communication. Experimental results demonstrate the strong classification performance of our intention recognition model. Furthermore, engineering case studies validate the assistant’s effectiveness in enhancing operational transparency, increasing user trust, bridging the human–machine information gap, and ultimately ensuring safer and more reliable tunneling. This research provides a feasible and innovative technological path for human–machine collaboration in the construction of critical urban infrastructure. Full article
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53 pages, 1902 KB  
Review
Edge AI for Smart Cities: Foundations, Challenges, and Opportunities
by Krishna Sruthi Velaga, Yifan Guo and Wei Yu
Smart Cities 2025, 8(6), 211; https://doi.org/10.3390/smartcities8060211 - 16 Dec 2025
Viewed by 2007
Abstract
Smart cities seek to improve urban living by embedding advanced technologies into infrastructures, services, and governance. Edge Artificial Intelligence (Edge AI) has emerged as a critical enabler by moving computation and learning closer to data sources, enabling real-time decision-making, improving privacy, and reducing [...] Read more.
Smart cities seek to improve urban living by embedding advanced technologies into infrastructures, services, and governance. Edge Artificial Intelligence (Edge AI) has emerged as a critical enabler by moving computation and learning closer to data sources, enabling real-time decision-making, improving privacy, and reducing reliance on centralized cloud infrastructure. This survey provides a comprehensive review of the foundations, challenges, and opportunities of edge AI in smart cities. In particular, we begin with an overview of layer-wise designs for edge AI-enabled smart cities, followed by an introduction to the core components of edge AI systems, including applications, sensing data, models, and infrastructure. Then, we summarize domain-specific applications spanning manufacturing, healthcare, transportation, buildings, and environments, highlighting both the softcore (e.g., AI algorithm design) and the hardcore (e.g., edge device selection) in heterogeneous applications. Next, we analyze the sources of sensing data generation, model design strategies, and hardware infrastructure that underpin edge AI deployment. Building on these, we finally identify several open challenges and provide future research directions in this domain. Our survey outlines a future research roadmap to advance edge AI technologies, thereby supporting the development of adaptive, harmonic, and sustainable smart cities. Full article
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30 pages, 3321 KB  
Article
An Attempt to Assess the Impact of AI as a Modern Tool for Regional Policy in the Process of Innovative and Economic Development of European Regions
by Nikolay Tsonkov and Miroslav Zlatev
Smart Cities 2025, 8(6), 210; https://doi.org/10.3390/smartcities8060210 - 15 Dec 2025
Viewed by 774
Abstract
The beginning of the 21st century is associated with a significant technological leap on a global scale, which has had a substantial impact on production and economic processes at the national and regional levels. This radical technological change in the economy is linked [...] Read more.
The beginning of the 21st century is associated with a significant technological leap on a global scale, which has had a substantial impact on production and economic processes at the national and regional levels. This radical technological change in the economy is linked to the emergence and development of artificial intelligence and effective knowledge management, which are the main drivers of economic growth. The use of AI today can be traced in many different areas of applied science—medicine, physics, mathematics, and engineering design, including modeling, planning, and management of territorial systems. The accumulation of large databases and other information necessary for AI to function is directly related to the spatial aspects of economic development, which is also based on local potential (a place-based approach). At the same time, local knowledge resources and innovation potential are not fully utilized in the context of technology diffusion and AI implementation in individual countries and regions. In this regard, this study aims to analyze the role of regional innovation systems, with a focus on AI development, and to track their impact across individual European regions, using NUTS2 spatial-level data to ensure objectivity. The authors consider AI innovation a modern tool for decision-making in the implementation of regional policy, with a specific impact on cohesion between EU regions. The results of the study show a direct link between the localization of regional innovation systems, R & D expenditure, AI implementation, and the economic development of European regions. Important factors influencing this process are the degree of Internet coverage, the capacity to generate innovation, the degree of AI implementation in the individual economic sectors of the countries, the growth of the ICT sector in relation to the overall development of GDP and the economy, and the result of the smart specialisation of regional innovation systems. Full article
(This article belongs to the Topic Artificial Intelligence Models, Tools and Applications)
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29 pages, 1156 KB  
Review
A Conceptual Framework for Integrating IoT and Blockchain for Smart and Sustainable Urban Development
by Abdulaziz I. Almulhim
Smart Cities 2025, 8(6), 209; https://doi.org/10.3390/smartcities8060209 - 14 Dec 2025
Viewed by 732
Abstract
Cities increasingly face urban sustainability challenges due to rapid urbanization, climate pressures, and infrastructure demands. In response, smart city frameworks have emerged as transformative strategies that promote sustainability, efficiency, and resilience. Among the enabling technologies, the integration of the Internet of Things (IoT) [...] Read more.
Cities increasingly face urban sustainability challenges due to rapid urbanization, climate pressures, and infrastructure demands. In response, smart city frameworks have emerged as transformative strategies that promote sustainability, efficiency, and resilience. Among the enabling technologies, the integration of the Internet of Things (IoT) and blockchain is gaining traction for supporting data-driven, transparent, and inclusive forms of sustainable smart cities. This systematic review analyzes peer-reviewed studies to examine how IoT and blockchain contribute to smart and sustainable urban development. The findings are organized into five thematic areas: (1) applications of IoT and blockchain for sustainable urban development; (2) operational applications across urban sustainability sectors such as energy, mobility, waste, and environmental management; (3) blockchain-enabled urban governance mechanisms including smart contracts, identity systems, and emergency response; (4) direct citizen engagement through transparent participation platforms and incentive-based systems; and (5) challenges and opportunities associated with IoT and blockchain technologies in the context of sustainable city development. In addition, the study proposes a conceptual framework that illustrates how IoT and blockchain integration support sustainable urban innovation. The review highlights the transformative potential of IoT–blockchain convergence in shaping future smart and sustainable cities and aligns with the United Nations Sustainable Development Goal 11. Full article
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19 pages, 1211 KB  
Article
Hub, Bridge, or Channel? Role Selection and Evolution of Urban Green Innovation Networks Under Climate Risk
by Pengfei Zhao and Qingfeng Luo
Smart Cities 2025, 8(6), 208; https://doi.org/10.3390/smartcities8060208 - 12 Dec 2025
Viewed by 320
Abstract
Physical climate risks are reshaping economic geography and pose a direct threat to the collaborative networks of green innovation that underpin mitigation and adaptation. This paper examines how climate risk differentially affects three core structural roles that cities occupy in green innovation collaboration [...] Read more.
Physical climate risks are reshaping economic geography and pose a direct threat to the collaborative networks of green innovation that underpin mitigation and adaptation. This paper examines how climate risk differentially affects three core structural roles that cities occupy in green innovation collaboration networks: hubs, which aggregate knowledge and are measured by degree centrality; channels, which transmit information and are captured by closeness centrality; and bridges, which link resources and are reflected in betweenness centrality. Using a panel of Chinese cities over the past decade and two way fixed effects models, we estimate the impacts of climate risk on cities’ network roles. The results show that climate risk significantly reduces all three roles, but the negative effects on channels and hubs are substantially larger than the effect on bridges. This pattern is consistent with a defensive structural reconfiguration of the network that emphasizes resilience at the expense of efficiency. The specific pathways and magnitudes of change depend on local financial conditions, regulatory responses, a city’s position in the urban hierarchy, and the type of climate risk encountered. These findings incorporate exogenous environmental pressure into theories of network evolution and provide empirical support for shifting regional innovation policy from an efficiency first orientation toward a resilience oriented innovation ecosystem. Full article
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20 pages, 4207 KB  
Article
Urban Micromobility in Practice: Insights from a Full-Year Analysis of Shared Scooter Use in Tel Aviv
by Ada Garus, Gabriel Dadashev, Biagio Ciuffo and Bat-Hen Nahmias-Biran
Smart Cities 2025, 8(6), 207; https://doi.org/10.3390/smartcities8060207 - 12 Dec 2025
Cited by 1 | Viewed by 648
Abstract
This paper investigates the spatiotemporal patterns and accessibility implications of shared e-scooter use in Tel Aviv, drawing on a complete year (2024) of trip-level data from all licensed providers. Shared micromobility services are often promoted as tools for reducing car dependency and improving [...] Read more.
This paper investigates the spatiotemporal patterns and accessibility implications of shared e-scooter use in Tel Aviv, drawing on a complete year (2024) of trip-level data from all licensed providers. Shared micromobility services are often promoted as tools for reducing car dependency and improving urban accessibility, yet their actual usage patterns and equity outcomes remain underexplored, especially outside North America and Western Europe. This study aims to address this gap by integrating over 9 million reconstructed scooter trips with public transport accessibility data, local weather records, and institutional calendar effects. Multivariate regression was applied to quantify temporal and environmental determinants of demand, seasonal-trend decomposition to reveal cyclical usage patterns, and spatial analysis to assess whether scooters extend or reinforce existing mobility hierarchies. Findings indicate that scooter use in Tel Aviv is highly structured, peaking during afternoon hours, dropping during holidays and rain, and reflecting the weekly rhythms of the workweek in Tel Aviv. However, spatial patterns show a strong concentration of usage within already well-connected central areas, with limited activity in low-accessibility zones. These results suggest that shared e-scooters are not currently fulfilling their potential as first- or last-mile connectors; instead, they primarily serve as short-range, intra-core alternatives to walking. Full article
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33 pages, 1750 KB  
Systematic Review
Quantum and Quantum-Inspired Optimisation in Transport and Logistics: A Systematic Review
by Paloma Liu, Simon Parkinson and Kay Best
Smart Cities 2025, 8(6), 206; https://doi.org/10.3390/smartcities8060206 - 11 Dec 2025
Viewed by 940
Abstract
Quantum computing offers transformative potential to solve complex optimisation problems in transportation and logistics, particularly those that involve large combinatorial decision spaces such as vehicle routing, traffic control, and supply chain design. Despite theoretical promise and growing empirical interest, its adoption remains limited. [...] Read more.
Quantum computing offers transformative potential to solve complex optimisation problems in transportation and logistics, particularly those that involve large combinatorial decision spaces such as vehicle routing, traffic control, and supply chain design. Despite theoretical promise and growing empirical interest, its adoption remains limited. This systematic literature review synthesises fifteen peer-reviewed studies published between 2015 and 2025, examining the application of quantum and quantum-inspired methods to transport optimisation. The review identifies five key problem domains (vehicle routing, factory scheduling, network design, traffic operations, and energy management) and categorises the quantum techniques used, including quantum annealing, variational circuits, and digital annealers. Although several studies demonstrate performance gains over classical heuristics, most rely on synthetic datasets, lack statistical robustness, and omit critical operational metrics such as energy consumption and queue latency. Four cross-cutting barriers are identified: hardware limitations, data availability, energy inefficiency, and organisational readiness. The review identifies limited real-world deployment, a lack of standardised benchmarks, and scarce cost–benefit evaluations, highlighting key areas where further empirical work is needed. It concludes with a structured research agenda aimed at bridging the gap between laboratory demonstrations and practical implementation, emphasising the need for pilot trials, open datasets, robust experimental protocols, and interdisciplinary collaboration. Full article
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22 pages, 6879 KB  
Article
Spatial Analysis on Urban Justice Delivering the Community Parks: A Case of the Saudi Arabian City of Al-Khobar
by Sara Qwaider, Mohammad Sharif Zami, Muhammad Bilal, Riyad Ashmeel and Mohammad A. Hassanain
Smart Cities 2025, 8(6), 205; https://doi.org/10.3390/smartcities8060205 - 10 Dec 2025
Viewed by 917
Abstract
This study evaluates the spatial equity of community parks in Al-Khobar City, Saudi Arabia, by examining their proximity, availability, distribution, accessibility, and user satisfaction. Ensuring equitable access to public open spaces is vital for promoting urban liveability and achieving the sustainability objectives of [...] Read more.
This study evaluates the spatial equity of community parks in Al-Khobar City, Saudi Arabia, by examining their proximity, availability, distribution, accessibility, and user satisfaction. Ensuring equitable access to public open spaces is vital for promoting urban liveability and achieving the sustainability objectives of Saudi Vision 2030. A mixed-methods approach integrating Geographic Information System (GIS)-based spatial analysis with a structured user survey was applied. GIS was used to map park locations, calculate per capita green space, and assess accessibility within a 500 m walking radius, while survey data from 300 respondents captured user satisfaction and perceptions of community park dimensions and indicators. The results reveal pronounced spatial disparities across neighbourhoods, with more than twenty areas lacking any park access and several others falling below the 5 m2 per capita standard. In contrast, centrally located neighbourhoods demonstrate adequate provision and higher satisfaction levels. These findings indicate a fragmented and inequitable park distribution that limits community well-being and social inclusion. The study concludes that integrating GIS-based evidence with community feedback can inform data-driven planning policies and promote equitable, accessible, and sustainable community parks. The proposed framework offers a replicable model for assessing urban green space equity in other Saudi and Middle Eastern cities. Full article
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27 pages, 7377 KB  
Article
A Hybrid Control Strategy for Multi-Timescale Air Conditioning Load Demand Response
by Yifan Bai, Jiandong Jiang, Qiangang Jia, Chenghao Liu, Binghao Yang and Peng Zhuang
Smart Cities 2025, 8(6), 204; https://doi.org/10.3390/smartcities8060204 - 9 Dec 2025
Viewed by 420
Abstract
Globally, the transition of energy structure towards clean and low-carbon is accelerating, with the increasing grid integration ratio of renewable energy. However, the inherent intermittency, volatility and randomness of such energy sources are in fundamental conflict with the traditional operation mode of existing [...] Read more.
Globally, the transition of energy structure towards clean and low-carbon is accelerating, with the increasing grid integration ratio of renewable energy. However, the inherent intermittency, volatility and randomness of such energy sources are in fundamental conflict with the traditional operation mode of existing power systems, which not only restricts the absorption capacity of renewable energy, but also poses severe challenges to the safe and stable operation of power systems. The integration of renewable energy sources into existing power systems poses numerous challenges that can be mitigated through the utilization of demand-side flexible resources. Among these, air-conditioning (AC) loads, as a prominent example, offer significant potential for enhancing flexibility in power systems. Nonetheless, determining an optimal AC control strategy to achieve the desired power response remains challenging, particularly in practical control settings where reliance on a single timescale control strategy may prove inadequate to address fluctuations in power system flexibility requirements. This paper investigates the characteristics of direct start-stop control and duty cycling control within a multi-timescale, source-load coordinated scheduling framework. Furthermore, a hybrid control strategy that combines these two methods is proposed, accompanied by the formulation of a power curtailment model tailored to the hybrid control strategy. Case study results demonstrate that the hybrid control strategy effectively augments AC load flexibility and enhances scheduling feasibility, thereby supporting the stable operation of the power system. Full article
(This article belongs to the Section Smart Grids)
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25 pages, 3501 KB  
Article
A Simple Physics-Informed Assessment of Smart Thermostat Strategies for Luxembourg’s Single-Family Homes
by Vahid Arabzadeh and Raphael Frank
Smart Cities 2025, 8(6), 203; https://doi.org/10.3390/smartcities8060203 - 9 Dec 2025
Viewed by 772
Abstract
Smart thermostats are a key technology for reducing residential energy consumption in smart cities, but their real-world effectiveness depends on the interaction between automation, occupant behavior, and the design of behavioral interventions. This study presents a physics-informed assessment of thermostat strategies across Luxembourg’s [...] Read more.
Smart thermostats are a key technology for reducing residential energy consumption in smart cities, but their real-world effectiveness depends on the interaction between automation, occupant behavior, and the design of behavioral interventions. This study presents a physics-informed assessment of thermostat strategies across Luxembourg’s single-family home stock, using an aggregate thermal model calibrated to eight years of hourly national heating demand and meteorological data. We simulate five categories of behavioral scenarios: dynamic thermostat adjustments, heat-wasting window-opening behavior, flexible comfort models, occupancy-based automation, and a portfolio of four probabilistic nudges (social comparison, real-time feedback, pre-commitment, and gamification). Results show that occupancy-based automation delivers the largest energy savings at 12.9%, by aligning heating with presence. In contrast, behavioral savings are highly fragile, as a stochastic window-opening behavior significantly erodes the 9.8% savings from eco-nudges, reducing the net gain to 7.6%. Among nudges, only social comparison yields significant savings, with a mean reduction of 7.6% (90% confidence interval: 5.3% to 9.8%), by durably lowering the thermal baseline. Real-time feedback and pre-commitment fail, achieving less than 0.5% savings, because they are misaligned with high-consumption periods. Thermal comfort, the psychological state of satisfaction with the thermal environment drives a large share of residential energy use. These findings demonstrate that effective smart thermostat design must prioritize robust, presence-responsive automation and interventions that reset default comfort norms, offering scalable, policy-ready pathways for residential energy reduction in urban energy systems. Full article
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18 pages, 5016 KB  
Article
A Strategy-Aware LLM-Based Framework for Vertiport Site Selection in Urban Air Mobility with Ground Transportation Integration
by Yuping Jin and Jun Ma
Smart Cities 2025, 8(6), 202; https://doi.org/10.3390/smartcities8060202 - 30 Nov 2025
Viewed by 670
Abstract
Urban air mobility (UAM) introduces electric vertical takeoff and landing (eVTOL) systems, creating new requirements for infrastructure planning. Vertiport siting is central, yet existing approaches such as multi-criteria decision analysis and optimization often rely on fixed criteria and seldom integrate ground transportation, which [...] Read more.
Urban air mobility (UAM) introduces electric vertical takeoff and landing (eVTOL) systems, creating new requirements for infrastructure planning. Vertiport siting is central, yet existing approaches such as multi-criteria decision analysis and optimization often rely on fixed criteria and seldom integrate ground transportation, which is critical for first- and last-mile access. Large language models (LLMs) show strong capabilities in reasoning and tool orchestration, but their role in siting tasks remains underexplored. This study proposes a strategy-aware LLM-based framework that connects heterogeneous spatial data with planning strategies expressed in natural language. A reflective loop connects the planner, executor, and validator for iterative refinement using two methods: multi-criteria decision analysis for interpretable mapping and a genetic algorithm for nonlinear optimization. Experiments in Los Angeles highlight both the potential and challenges of applying LLM agents to siting: outcome evaluation shows that strategies can be translated into distinct trade-offs, while process evaluation demonstrates the benefits of iterative refinement. The study suggests that LLM-based agents can formalize qualitative strategies into reproducible workflows, indicating their potential for UAM siting and promise for broader use in urban planning. Full article
(This article belongs to the Special Issue Cost-Effective Transportation Planning for Smart Cities)
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52 pages, 3350 KB  
Review
Unleashing the Potential of Large Language Models in Urban Data Analytics: A Review of Emerging Innovations and Future Research
by Feifeng Jiang, Jun Ma and Yuping Jin
Smart Cities 2025, 8(6), 201; https://doi.org/10.3390/smartcities8060201 - 28 Nov 2025
Viewed by 2006
Abstract
This paper presents a comprehensive review of emerging innovations and future research directions leveraging Large Language Models (LLMs) for urban data analytics, examining how cities generate, structure, and use information to support planning and operational decisions. While LLMs show promise in addressing critical [...] Read more.
This paper presents a comprehensive review of emerging innovations and future research directions leveraging Large Language Models (LLMs) for urban data analytics, examining how cities generate, structure, and use information to support planning and operational decisions. While LLMs show promise in addressing critical challenges faced by urban stakeholders—including data integration, accessibility, and cross-domain analysis—their applications and effectiveness in urban contexts remain largely unexplored and fragmented across disciplines. Through our systematic analysis of 178 papers, we examine the impact of LLMs across the four key stages of urban data analytics: collection, preprocessing, modeling, and post-analysis. Our review encompasses various urban domains, including transportation, urban planning, disaster management, and environmental monitoring, identifying how LLMs can transform analytical approaches in these fields. We identify current trends, innovative applications, and challenges in integrating LLMs into urban analytics workflows. Based on our findings, we propose a 3E framework for future research directions: Expanding information dimensions, Enhancing model capabilities, and Executing advanced applications. This framework provides a structured approach to emphasize key opportunities in the field. Our study concludes by discussing critical challenges, including hallucination, scalability, fairness, and ethical concerns, emphasizing the need for interdisciplinary collaboration to fully realize the potential of LLMs in creating smarter, more sustainable urban environments for researchers and urban practitioners working to integrate LLMs into data-driven decision processes. Full article
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28 pages, 10522 KB  
Article
Leveraging Low-Cost Sensor Data and Predictive Modelling for IoT-Driven Indoor Air Quality Monitoring
by Patricia Camacho-Magriñán, Diego Sales-Lerida, Alejandro Lara-Doña and Daniel Sanchez-Morillo
Smart Cities 2025, 8(6), 200; https://doi.org/10.3390/smartcities8060200 - 28 Nov 2025
Viewed by 801
Abstract
Indoor air quality (IAQ) in residential settings is often dominated by high-concentration pollutant events from activities such as cooking and occupancy, which are overlooked by traditional 24 h average assessments. In this, we have designed and implemented a low-cost unit for remote IAQ [...] Read more.
Indoor air quality (IAQ) in residential settings is often dominated by high-concentration pollutant events from activities such as cooking and occupancy, which are overlooked by traditional 24 h average assessments. In this, we have designed and implemented a low-cost unit for remote IAQ monitoring. We deployed these units for high-resolution remote monitoring of CO2, particulate matter (PM), and volatile organic compounds (VOCs) in three different domestic environments: a kitchen, a living room, and a bedroom. The monitoring campaign confirmed that, while daily averages frequently remained below guideline limits, transient peaks (e.g., CO2 exceeding 2800 ppm in bedrooms and significant increases in PM during cooking) posed acute exposure risks. This dataset was used to train and evaluate machine learning models for 10 min ahead pollutant forecasting. Ensemble tree-based methods (Random Forest) and gradient boosting algorithms (XGBoost, LGBM, and CatBoost) were effective and robust. The predictability of the models correlated with room dynamics: performance improved under clear cyclical patterns (bedroom) and remained stable under stochastic events (kitchen). This work shows that integrating low-cost IoT sensing with machine learning enables proactive IAQ management, supporting health interventions driven by predictive risk rather than static averages. Full article
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40 pages, 9179 KB  
Article
Cloud-Enabled Hybrid, Accurate and Robust Short-Term Electric Load Forecasting Framework for Smart Residential Buildings: Evaluation of Aggregate vs. Appliance-Level Forecasting
by Kamran Hassanpouri Baesmat, Emma E. Regentova and Yahia Baghzouz
Smart Cities 2025, 8(6), 199; https://doi.org/10.3390/smartcities8060199 - 27 Nov 2025
Viewed by 652
Abstract
Accurate short-term load forecasting is vital for smart-city energy management, enabling real-time grid stability and sustainable demand response. This study introduces a cloud-enabled hybrid forecasting framework that integrates Seasonal Autoregressive Integrated Moving Average with Exogenous variables (SARIMAX), Random Forest (RF), and Long Short-Term [...] Read more.
Accurate short-term load forecasting is vital for smart-city energy management, enabling real-time grid stability and sustainable demand response. This study introduces a cloud-enabled hybrid forecasting framework that integrates Seasonal Autoregressive Integrated Moving Average with Exogenous variables (SARIMAX), Random Forest (RF), and Long Short-Term Memory (LSTM) models, unified through a residual-correction mechanism to capture both linear seasonal and nonlinear temporal dynamics. The framework performs fine-grained 5 min forecasting at both appliance and aggregate levels, revealing that the aggregate forecast achieves higher stability and accuracy than the sum of appliance-level predictions. To ensure operational resilience, three independent hybrid models are deployed across distinct cloud platforms with a two-out-of-three voting scheme, that guarantees continuity if a single-cloud interruption occurs. Using a real residential dataset from a house in Summerlin, Las Vegas (2022), the proposed system achieved a Root Mean Squared Logarithmic Error (RMSLE) of 0.0431 for aggregated load prediction representing a 35% improvement over the next-best model (Random Forest) and maintained consistent prediction accuracy during simulated cloud outages. These results demonstrate that the proposed framework provides a scalable, fault-tolerant, and accurate energy forecasting. Full article
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19 pages, 5276 KB  
Article
A Multimodal Learning Approach for Protecting the Metro System of Medellin Colombia Against Corrupted User Traffic Data
by Josue Genaro Almaraz-Rivera, Jose Antonio Cantoral-Ceballos, Juan Felipe Botero, Francisco Javier Muñoz and Brian David Martinez
Smart Cities 2025, 8(6), 198; https://doi.org/10.3390/smartcities8060198 - 27 Nov 2025
Viewed by 614
Abstract
A critical task in infrastructure security is to model user traffic in transportation systems to alert whenever anomalous behavior is observed. Discerning those abnormal samples is possible by auditing the available data, which then enables proper policy making to guarantee fair tariffs and [...] Read more.
A critical task in infrastructure security is to model user traffic in transportation systems to alert whenever anomalous behavior is observed. Discerning those abnormal samples is possible by auditing the available data, which then enables proper policy making to guarantee fair tariffs and the design of strategies to tackle problems such as passenger congestion. In this paper, we present an offline cybersecurity approach for the multimodal modeling of user traffic for the Colombian metro. To identify the anomalies, we design custom Deep Autoencoders based on the embeddings produced by the Self-Supervised Learning TabNet architecture. Additionally, we provide explainability through a SHAP-based component and the analysis of external image data using LLaVA as the selected Large Multimodal Model. The results indicate that most problems that occur on one metro line also affect the other, demonstrating the interconnectivity of the metro system, a crucial aspect that motivates the coordinated emergency response to improve the passenger travel experience. Although the detected problems might already have been identified and reported on social media, the transparency provided helps create confidence when an abnormality is observed, and in case there is no backup information on our official external data sources, it represents an alert to examine it more deeply, becoming an intelligent assessment tool for the metro. This article also sheds light on the potential of the publicly available dataset used and the importance of expanding its existing variables and information. Full article
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26 pages, 8517 KB  
Article
Seeing the City Live: Bridging Edge Vehicle Perception and Cloud Digital Twins to Empower Smart Cities
by Hafsa Iqbal, Jaime Godoy, Beatriz Martin, Abdulla Al-kaff and Fernando Garcia
Smart Cities 2025, 8(6), 197; https://doi.org/10.3390/smartcities8060197 - 25 Nov 2025
Viewed by 923
Abstract
This paper presents a framework that integrates real-time onboard (ego vehicle) perception module with edge processing capabilities and a cloud-based digital twin for intelligent transportation systems (ITSs) in smart city applications. The proposed system combines onboard 3D object detection and tracking with low [...] Read more.
This paper presents a framework that integrates real-time onboard (ego vehicle) perception module with edge processing capabilities and a cloud-based digital twin for intelligent transportation systems (ITSs) in smart city applications. The proposed system combines onboard 3D object detection and tracking with low latency edge-to-cloud communication, achieving an average end-to-end latency below 0.02 s at 10 Hz update frequency. Experiments conducted on a real autonomous vehicle platform demonstrate a mean Average Precision (mAP@40) of 83.5% for the 3D perception module. The proposed system enables real-time traffic visualization while enabling scalable data management by reducing communication overhead. Future work will extend the system to multi-vehicle deployments and incorporate additional environmental semantics such as traffic signal states, road conditions, and predictive Artificial Intelligence (AI) models to enhance decision support in dynamic urban environments. Full article
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38 pages, 1419 KB  
Systematic Review
Mapping Digital Solutions for Multi-Scale Built Environment Observation: A Cluster-Based Systematic Review
by Aleksandra Milovanović, Uroš Šošević, Nikola Cvetković, Mladen Pešić, Stefan Janković, Verica Krstić, Jelena Ristić Trajković, Milica Milojević, Ana Nikezić, Dejan Simić and Vladan Djokić
Smart Cities 2025, 8(6), 196; https://doi.org/10.3390/smartcities8060196 - 24 Nov 2025
Viewed by 997
Abstract
This study investigates the intersection of digital tools and methods with the built environment disciplinary framework, focusing on Urban Planning and Development (UPD), Architecture, Engineering, and Construction (AEC), and Cultural Heritage (CH) domains. Using a systematic literature review of 29 solution-oriented documents, the [...] Read more.
This study investigates the intersection of digital tools and methods with the built environment disciplinary framework, focusing on Urban Planning and Development (UPD), Architecture, Engineering, and Construction (AEC), and Cultural Heritage (CH) domains. Using a systematic literature review of 29 solution-oriented documents, the research applies both bibliometric and in-depth content analysis to identify methodological patterns. Co-occurrence mapping revealed four thematic clusters—Data Integration and User-Centric Analysis, Advanced 3D Spatial Analysis and Processing, Real-Time Interaction and Digital Twin Support, and 3D Visualization—each corresponding to distinct stages in a digital workflow, from data acquisition to interactive communication. Comparative and interdependency analyses demonstrated that these clusters operate in a sequential yet interconnected manner, with Data Integration forming the foundation for analysis, simulation, and visualization tasks. While current solutions are robust within individual stages, they remain fragmented, indicating a need for systemic interoperability. The findings underscore the opportunity to develop integrated digital platforms that synthesize these clusters, enabling more comprehensive observation, management, and planning of the built environment. Such integration could strengthen decision-making frameworks, enhance public participation, and advance sustainable, smart city development. Full article
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7 pages, 191 KB  
Editorial
Smart Cities—Announcing the Updated Scope and Sections
by Javier Prieto, Pierluigi Siano, Silvano Vergura and Frank Witlox
Smart Cities 2025, 8(6), 195; https://doi.org/10.3390/smartcities8060195 - 21 Nov 2025
Viewed by 1264
Abstract
The development of smart cities is a dynamic, accelerating story [...] Full article
19 pages, 13860 KB  
Article
TGU-Net: A Temporal Generative U-Net Framework for Real-Time Traffic Anomaly Detection
by Borja Pérez, Mario Resino, Abdulla Al-Kaff and Fernando García
Smart Cities 2025, 8(6), 194; https://doi.org/10.3390/smartcities8060194 - 19 Nov 2025
Viewed by 585
Abstract
Traffic anomaly detection plays a crucial role in improving road safety and enabling timely responses to abnormal events. Recent research has explored generative and predictive models to enhance detection accuracy; however, the dynamic and complex nature of traffic scenes often introduces noise and [...] Read more.
Traffic anomaly detection plays a crucial role in improving road safety and enabling timely responses to abnormal events. Recent research has explored generative and predictive models to enhance detection accuracy; however, the dynamic and complex nature of traffic scenes often introduces noise and uncertainty, reducing reliability. This work presents TGU-Net, a Temporal Generative U-Net framework designed for real-time traffic anomaly detection in urban environments. The proposed model integrates two key innovations: (1) a temporal modeling component that captures dependencies across consecutive frames, and (2) contextual scene enrichment that enhances the distinction between normal and anomalous behaviors. These additions mitigate reconstruction noise and improve detection robustness without compromising computational efficiency. Experimental evaluations on a synthetically generated CARLA-based dataset demonstrate that TGU-Net achieves strong performance in precision, recall, and early anomaly detection, confirming its potential as a scalable and reliable framework for real-world traffic monitoring systems. Full article
(This article belongs to the Section Smart Urban Mobility, Transport, and Logistics)
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18 pages, 1846 KB  
Article
Modeling Informal Driver Interaction and Priority Behavior in Smart-City Traffic Systems
by Alica Kalašová, Peter Fabian, Ľubomír Černický and Kristián Čulík
Smart Cities 2025, 8(6), 193; https://doi.org/10.3390/smartcities8060193 - 13 Nov 2025
Viewed by 2404
Abstract
Accurate traffic modeling is essential for effective urban mobility planning within Smart Cities. Conventional capacity assessment methods assume rule-based driver behavior and therefore neglect psychological priority, an informal interaction in which drivers negotiate right-of-way contrary to traffic regulations. This study investigates how the [...] Read more.
Accurate traffic modeling is essential for effective urban mobility planning within Smart Cities. Conventional capacity assessment methods assume rule-based driver behavior and therefore neglect psychological priority, an informal interaction in which drivers negotiate right-of-way contrary to traffic regulations. This study investigates how the absence of this behavioral factor affects the accuracy of delay and capacity evaluation at unsignalized intersections. A 12 h field observation was conducted at an intersection in Prešov, Slovakia, and 28 driver interactions were analyzed using linear regression modeling. The derived model (R2 = 0.83, p < 0.05) demonstrates that incorporating psychological priority significantly improves the agreement between calculated and observed waiting times. Unrealistic results occurring under oversaturated conditions in standard methodologies were eliminated. The findings confirm that behavioral variability has a measurable impact on traffic performance and should be reflected in analytical and simulation models. Integrating these behavioral parameters into Smart City traffic modeling contributes to more realistic and human-centered decision-making in intersection design and capacity management, supporting the development of safer and more efficient urban mobility systems. Full article
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31 pages, 11797 KB  
Article
AI-Driven Virtual Power Plant Scheduling: CUDA-Accelerated Parallel Simulated Annealing Approach
by Ali Abbasi, João L. Sobral and Ricardo Rodrigues
Smart Cities 2025, 8(6), 192; https://doi.org/10.3390/smartcities8060192 - 13 Nov 2025
Viewed by 942
Abstract
Efficient scheduling of virtual power plants (VPPs) is essential for the integration of distributed energy resources into modern power systems. This study presents a CUDA-accelerated Multiple-Chain Simulated Annealing (MC-SA) algorithm tailored for optimizing VPP scheduling. Traditional Simulated Annealing algorithms are inherently sequential, limiting [...] Read more.
Efficient scheduling of virtual power plants (VPPs) is essential for the integration of distributed energy resources into modern power systems. This study presents a CUDA-accelerated Multiple-Chain Simulated Annealing (MC-SA) algorithm tailored for optimizing VPP scheduling. Traditional Simulated Annealing algorithms are inherently sequential, limiting their scalability for large-scale applications. The proposed MC-SA algorithm mitigates this limitation by executing multiple independent annealing chains concurrently, enhancing the exploration of the solution space and reducing the requisite number of sequential cooling iterations. The algorithm employs a dual-level parallelism strategy: at the prosumer level, individual energy producers and consumers are assessed in parallel; at the algorithmic level, multiple Simulated Annealing chains operate simultaneously. This architecture not only expedites computation but also improves solution accuracy. Experimental evaluations demonstrate that the CUDA-based MC-SA achieves substantial speedups—up to 10× compared to a single-chain baseline implementation while maintaining or enhancing solution quality. Our analysis reveals an empirical power-law relationship between parallel chains and required sequential iterations (iterations ∝ chains−0.88±0.17), demonstrating that using 50 chains reduces the required number of sequential iterations by approximately 10× compared to single-chain SA while maintaining equivalent solution quality. The algorithm demonstrates scalable performance across VPP sizes from 250 to 1000 prosumers, with approximately 50 chains providing the optimal balance between solution quality and computational efficiency for practical applications. Full article
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35 pages, 109889 KB  
Article
Unregulated Vertical Urban Growth Alters Microclimate: Coupling Building-Scale Digital Surface Models with High-Resolution Microclimate Simulations
by Jonatas Goulart Marinho Falcão, Luiz Felipe de Almeida Furtado, Gisele Silva Barbosa and Luiz Carlos Teixeira Coelho
Smart Cities 2025, 8(6), 191; https://doi.org/10.3390/smartcities8060191 - 10 Nov 2025
Viewed by 904
Abstract
Rio de Janeiro’s favelas house over 20% of the city’s population in just 5% of its territory, with Rio das Pedras emerging as a critical case study: ranking as Brazil’s fifth most populous favela and its most vertically intensified. This study quantifies how [...] Read more.
Rio de Janeiro’s favelas house over 20% of the city’s population in just 5% of its territory, with Rio das Pedras emerging as a critical case study: ranking as Brazil’s fifth most populous favela and its most vertically intensified. This study quantifies how uncontrolled vertical growth in informal settlements disrupts microclimate dynamics, directly impacting thermal comfort. Using high-resolution geospatial analytics, we integrated digital surface models (DSMs) derived from LiDAR and photogrammetric data (2013, 2019, and 2024) with microclimatic simulations to assess urban morphology changes and their thermal effects. A spatiotemporal cadastral analysis tracked vertical expansion (new floors) and demolition patterns, while ENVI-met simulations mapped air temperature anomalies across decadal scenarios. Results reveal two key findings: (1) rapid, unregulated construction has significantly altered local airflow and surface energy balance, exacerbating the urban heat island (UHI) effect; (2) microclimatic simulations consistently recorded elevated temperatures, with the most pronounced impacts in densely built zones. These findings underscore the need for public policies to mitigate such negative effects observed in informal settlement areas. Full article
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39 pages, 4358 KB  
Article
Optimizing Urban Public Transportation with a Crowding-Aware Multimodal Trip Recommendation System
by Assunta De Caro, Ida Falco, Angelo Furno and Eugenio Zimeo
Smart Cities 2025, 8(6), 190; https://doi.org/10.3390/smartcities8060190 - 10 Nov 2025
Viewed by 1806
Abstract
Traditional multimodal public transportation recommenders often overlook in-vehicle crowding, a critical factor that causes passenger discomfort and leads to an inefficient distribution of people across the network that affects its reliability. To address this, we propose a proof of concept for a novel [...] Read more.
Traditional multimodal public transportation recommenders often overlook in-vehicle crowding, a critical factor that causes passenger discomfort and leads to an inefficient distribution of people across the network that affects its reliability. To address this, we propose a proof of concept for a novel framework that directly integrates crowding into its optimization process, balancing it with user preferences such as travel habits, travel time, and line changes. Built on the Behavior-Enabled IoT (BeT) paradigm, our system is designed to manage the crucial QoE and QoS trade-off inherent in smart mobility. We validate our balanced strategy using real-world data from Lyon, comparing it against two baselines: a QoE-driven model that prioritizes user habits and a QoS-driven model that focuses solely on network efficiency. Our Wilcoxon-based statistical analysis demonstrates that a balanced strategy is the most effective approach for substantially mitigating public transit crowding. Our Wilcoxon-based statistical analysis demonstrates that a balanced strategy is the most effective approach for mitigating public transit crowding, since it leads to a substantial decrease in crowding. Despite a potential increase in travel times, our solution respects user habits and avoids excessive transfers, providing significant operational improvements without compromising passenger convenience. Full article
(This article belongs to the Special Issue Cost-Effective Transportation Planning for Smart Cities)
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36 pages, 782 KB  
Article
Perceptions of Quality of Life Among Various Groups of Residents in Cities Aspiring to Be Smart in a Developing Economy
by Izabela Jonek-Kowalska
Smart Cities 2025, 8(6), 189; https://doi.org/10.3390/smartcities8060189 - 7 Nov 2025
Viewed by 965
Abstract
The inspiration and main goal for creating smart cities is to improve the quality of urban life. However, this ambitious task is not always successful as urban stakeholders are not homogeneous. Their experiences and expectations can vary significantly, which ultimately affects their level [...] Read more.
The inspiration and main goal for creating smart cities is to improve the quality of urban life. However, this ambitious task is not always successful as urban stakeholders are not homogeneous. Their experiences and expectations can vary significantly, which ultimately affects their level of satisfaction with life in the city. This article assesses the quality of life in 19 cities with county rights located in the Silesian province of Poland. The assessment takes into account stakeholders’ age, gender, education, and household size. The study also assesses the geographical variation in the quality of life in individual cities in the region with a view to individualizing the management approach. The research methodology is based on a survey conducted in a representative sample of 1863 residents of Silesian cities. The results are analyzed using descriptive statistics and nonparametric tests. The conclusions indicate a lower quality of life for women, residents aged 31 to 40, and people with primary education and a bachelor’s degree. The quality of life is significantly worse in post-mining towns where economic transformation has not been successfully implemented. The quality of urban life is rated highest by men, older people, and residents with basic and secondary education. Communities living in cities with modern industry and a stable economic situation are very satisfied with their standard of living. The results of the study imply the need for an individualized approach to shaping living conditions in cities and the implementation of remedial measures for groups and cities at risk of a lower quality of life. This will help to balance the quality of urban life and prevent various forms of exclusion. Full article
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19 pages, 687 KB  
Article
Social Responses and Change Management Strategies in Smart City Transitions: A Socio-Demographic Perspective
by Shadi Shayan and Ki Pyung Kim
Smart Cities 2025, 8(6), 188; https://doi.org/10.3390/smartcities8060188 - 6 Nov 2025
Viewed by 715
Abstract
Technological advancements alone, without addressing public responses to social changes cannot ensure inclusive and sustainable smart city transitions as cities and societies comprise diverse individuals and communities with varied socio-demographic backgrounds. Thus, this research investigates social responses to smart city transitions aiming to [...] Read more.
Technological advancements alone, without addressing public responses to social changes cannot ensure inclusive and sustainable smart city transitions as cities and societies comprise diverse individuals and communities with varied socio-demographic backgrounds. Thus, this research investigates social responses to smart city transitions aiming to understand individuals’ social reactions to the changes across diverse socio-demographic profiles, and identify socio-demographic group-specific change management strategies to enhance public engagement and minimise resistance during the transition. Through a questionnaire survey using multivariate analysis, correlations between socio-demographic profiles and social reactions are identified. Age and frustration showed a positive correlation indicating that elderly individuals express greater concerns about unfamiliar smart technologies. Weak negative correlations emerged between income levels and transition-related stress including shock, frustration and depression. Significant differences were revealed between income groups (AUD 126,000+ and below AUD 90,000) associated with job security due to smart technologies and digital automation. Improving digital proficiency through free local government-led training, and reinforcing the benefits of digitally transformed urban environments through timely technical support were identified as the most essential change management strategies. Thus, this research will contribute to enabling local governments and policymakers to have practical insights in developing socially inclusive and community-centric transition plans with minimised social resistance. Full article
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21 pages, 8098 KB  
Article
Multi-Sensor AI-Based Urban Tree Crown Segmentation from High-Resolution Satellite Imagery for Smart Environmental Monitoring
by Amirmohammad Sharifi, Reza Shah-Hosseini, Danesh Shokri and Saeid Homayouni
Smart Cities 2025, 8(6), 187; https://doi.org/10.3390/smartcities8060187 - 6 Nov 2025
Viewed by 1108
Abstract
Urban tree detection is fundamental to effective forestry management, biodiversity preservation, and environmental monitoring—key components of sustainable smart city development. This study introduces a deep learning framework for urban tree crown segmentation that exclusively leverages high-resolution satellite imagery from GeoEye-1, WorldView-2, and WorldView-3, [...] Read more.
Urban tree detection is fundamental to effective forestry management, biodiversity preservation, and environmental monitoring—key components of sustainable smart city development. This study introduces a deep learning framework for urban tree crown segmentation that exclusively leverages high-resolution satellite imagery from GeoEye-1, WorldView-2, and WorldView-3, thereby eliminating the need for additional data sources such as LiDAR or UAV imagery. The proposed framework employs a Residual U-Net architecture augmented with Attention Gates (AGs) to address major challenges, including class imbalance, overlapping crowns, and spectral interference from complex urban structures, using a custom composite loss function. The main contribution of this work is to integrate data from three distinct satellite sensors with varying spatial and spectral characteristics into a single processing pipeline, demonstrating that such well-established architectures can yield reliable, high-accuracy results across heterogeneous resolutions and imaging conditions. A further advancement of this study is the development of a hybrid ground-truth generation strategy that integrates NDVI-based watershed segmentation, manual annotation, and the Segment Anything Model (SAM), thereby reducing annotation effort while enhancing mask fidelity. In addition, by training on 4-band RGBN imagery from multiple satellite sensors, the model exhibits generalization capabilities across diverse urban environments. Despite being trained on a relatively small dataset comprising only 1200 image patches, the framework achieves state-of-the-art performance (F1-score: 0.9121; IoU: 0.8384; precision: 0.9321; recall: 0.8930). These results stem from the integration of the Residual U-Net with Attention Gates, which enhance feature representation and suppress noise from urban backgrounds, as well as from hybrid ground-truth generation and the combined BCE–Dice loss function, which effectively mitigates class imbalance. Collectively, these design choices enable robust model generalization and clear performance superiority over baseline networks such as DeepLab v3 and U-Net with VGG19. Fully automated and computationally efficient, the proposed approach delivers cost-effective, accurate segmentation using satellite data alone, rendering it particularly suitable for scalable, operational smart city applications and environmental monitoring initiatives. Full article
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18 pages, 2385 KB  
Article
Interpretable SLM-Driven Trust Framework for Smart Cities: Managing Distributed Energy Resources in Networked Microgrids
by Razi Iqbal and Nathan Stuart Hamill
Smart Cities 2025, 8(6), 186; https://doi.org/10.3390/smartcities8060186 - 5 Nov 2025
Viewed by 550
Abstract
Networked Microgrids (NMGs) have revolutionized the energy landscape by enhancing grid flexibility and decentralizing power generation, playing a pivotal role in the development of smart cities. Distributed Energy Resources (DERs) are a fundamental component of a typical NMG; hence, their trustworthiness is of [...] Read more.
Networked Microgrids (NMGs) have revolutionized the energy landscape by enhancing grid flexibility and decentralizing power generation, playing a pivotal role in the development of smart cities. Distributed Energy Resources (DERs) are a fundamental component of a typical NMG; hence, their trustworthiness is of utmost importance for the reliable and efficient operation of NMGs within smart city environments. However, the processing and analysis of unstructured data when performing trust assessments of these DERs is still not well explored. This research fills this gap by proposing a new trust framework that leverages the advanced capabilities of Neural Networks to assess the trustworthiness of DERs in NMGs. Furthermore, the proposed framework analyzes and converts the unstructured data from DERs into a structured format for generating trust scores for DERs. There are two primary components of this framework: (1) an SLM (Small Language Model)-based module for data analysis, (2) a neural network-based module for trust score calculation. These two components provide an end-to-end process for transforming an unstructured input into meaningful trust metrics. Several experiments were conducted to evaluate the performance of the proposed framework, and it turned out that the results produced by the proposed framework were highly precise, accurate and consistent. Furthermore, the proposed framework outperformed the existing frameworks in size and efficiency, making it a promising solution for trustworthy DER management in smart city microgrid ecosystems. Full article
(This article belongs to the Special Issue Energy Strategies of Smart Cities)
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23 pages, 1650 KB  
Article
Pedal Power: Operational Models, Opportunities, and Obstacles of Bike Lending in North America
by Susan Shaheen, Brooke Wolfe and Adam Cohen
Smart Cities 2025, 8(6), 185; https://doi.org/10.3390/smartcities8060185 - 4 Nov 2025
Viewed by 964
Abstract
Bike lending offers a service that enables individuals to borrow bicycles for short-term use (i.e., ranging from 2 hours to 36 months), typically from designated locations within cities, campuses, or communities. Unlike bikesharing systems that typically rely on automated kiosks and/or undocked and [...] Read more.
Bike lending offers a service that enables individuals to borrow bicycles for short-term use (i.e., ranging from 2 hours to 36 months), typically from designated locations within cities, campuses, or communities. Unlike bikesharing systems that typically rely on automated kiosks and/or undocked and free-floating devices for public access, bike lending involves a managed program with staff, similar to a library model. These programs can be administered by community organizations, bike shops, public libraries, and other local entities. They are typically community- or membership-based, with many programs associated with non-profit organizations or publicly owned and operated. In this paper, we investigate bike lending in the United States and Canada as of Spring 2024, including a literature review, the identification and characterization of bike lending programs (n = 55), expert interviews (n = 24), a survey of bike lending operators (n = 31), and 2 focus groups with a total of 12 participants. Insights from expert interviews and operator surveys highlight the experiences of professionals involved in bike lending. The focus groups capture the experiences of bike lending users. This paper finds that North American bike lending is often tailored to the specific needs of communities, such as youth, low-income individuals, and the general population. More sustained funding could support program expansion and diversify bike offerings. Enhancing cycling infrastructure, such as adding dedicated bike lanes and paths, could improve overall cycling safety and increase participation in bike lending programs. This study’s findings could help strengthen existing bike lending programs, guide the development of new initiatives and supportive policies, and enhance safe bicycle use for participants. Full article
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31 pages, 3366 KB  
Article
Beyond Efficiency: Integrating Resilience into the Assessment of Road Intersection Performance
by Nazanin Zare, Maria Luisa Tumminello, Elżbieta Macioszek and Anna Granà
Smart Cities 2025, 8(6), 184; https://doi.org/10.3390/smartcities8060184 - 1 Nov 2025
Viewed by 1082
Abstract
Extreme weather events, such as storms, pose significant challenges to the reliability and efficiency of urban road networks, making intersection design and management critical to maintaining mobility. This paper addresses the dual objectives of traffic efficiency and resilience by evaluating the performance of [...] Read more.
Extreme weather events, such as storms, pose significant challenges to the reliability and efficiency of urban road networks, making intersection design and management critical to maintaining mobility. This paper addresses the dual objectives of traffic efficiency and resilience by evaluating the performance of roundabouts, signalized, and two-way stop-controlled (TWSC) intersections under normal and storm-disrupted conditions. A mixed-method approach was adopted, combining a heuristic framework from the Highway Capacity Manual with microsimulations in AIMSUN Next. Three Polish case studies were examined; each was modeled under alternative control strategies. The findings demonstrate the superior robustness of roundabouts, which retain functionality during power outages, while signalized intersections reveal vulnerabilities when control systems fail, reverting to less efficient TWSC behavior. TWSC intersections consistently exhibited the weakest performance, particularly under high or uneven traffic demand. Despite methodological differences in delay estimation, the convergence of results through Level of Service categories strengthens the reliability of findings. Beyond technical evaluation, the study underscores the importance of resilient intersection design in climate-vulnerable regions and the value of integrating analytical and simulation-based methods. By situating intersection performance within urban resilience, this research provides actionable insights for policymakers, planners, and engineers seeking to balance efficiency with adaptability in infrastructure planning. Full article
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27 pages, 27074 KB  
Article
Striking a Pose: DIY Computer Vision Sensor Kit to Measure Public Life Using Pose Estimation Enhanced Action Recognition Model
by Sarah Williams and Minwook Kang
Smart Cities 2025, 8(6), 183; https://doi.org/10.3390/smartcities8060183 - 1 Nov 2025
Viewed by 2250
Abstract
Observing and measuring public life is essential for designing inclusive, vibrant, and climate-resilient public spaces. While urban planners have traditionally relied on manual observation, recent advances in open-source Computer Vision (CV) now enable automated analysis. However, most CV sensors in urban studies focus [...] Read more.
Observing and measuring public life is essential for designing inclusive, vibrant, and climate-resilient public spaces. While urban planners have traditionally relied on manual observation, recent advances in open-source Computer Vision (CV) now enable automated analysis. However, most CV sensors in urban studies focus on transportation analysis, offering limited insight into nuanced human behaviors such as sitting or socializing. This limitation stems in part from the challenges CV algorithms face in detecting subtle activities within public spaces. This study introduces the Public Life Sensor Kit (PLSK), an open-source, do-it-yourself system that integrates a GoPro camera with an NVIDIA Jetson edge device, and evaluates whether pose estimation-enhanced CV models can improve the detection of fine-grained public life behaviors, such as sitting and social interaction. The PLSK was deployed during a public space intervention project in Sydney, Australia. The resulting data were measured against data collected from the Vivacity sensor, a commercial transportation-focused CV system, and traditional human observation. The results show that the PLSK outperforms the commercial sensor in detecting and classifying key public life activities, including pedestrian traffic, sitting, and socializing. These findings highlight the potential of the PLSK to support ethically collected and behavior-rich public space analysis and advocate for its adoption in next-generation urban sensing technologies. Full article
(This article belongs to the Special Issue Computer Vision for Creating Sustainable Smart Cities of Tomorrow)
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