Smart City update: Living Lab set to launch, TV show may highlight KC innovation
July 11, 2017 | Meghan LeVota
Bob Bennett, chief innovation officer at the City of Kansas City, Mo., said Kansas City has championed itself as a leader in big data and smart city tech for years now.
But now the city is reaching an inflection point to leverage the data at a significant scale, he said.
“The bottom line is that now we are able to go from using data to ease making decision to now using data to help make effective predictions so that the city can be better postured for the future,” Bennett said to a group of leaders Monday at City Hall during the city’s July Smart City Advisory Board meeting.
Making “smart” and future-focused decisions don’t happen overnight. Since the launch of the Smart City initiative in 2016, downtown Kansas City has slowly been transforming into a hotbed of sensor networks and Wi-Fi connectivity on and around the 2.2-mile streetcar line.
The $15.7 million public-private project is a collaboration between Kansas City, Sprint, Cisco and Think Big Partners. Last year, the initiative established 328 WiFi access points, 178 smart lighting video nodes and 25 smart kiosks, laying the foundation on which the city can begin to collect data on downtowners’ behavior.
Bennett said that he believes the city has built a solid foundation of smart city infrastructure. It now allows city leaders to jump in and solve more problems.
“Now the question is how do we prepare for the next six, nine and ten months,” Bennett said. “Once the technology figures out how to measure the heartbeat of the city, then it can be shown in the data where that heartbeat is showing arrhythmia. If you can figure that out, you can get your cardiologist involved earlier rather than later.”
Here are more updates on the Smart City:
The Think Big-led Living Lab
One entrepreneurial component of the Smart City initiative is its “Living Lab,” a platform in which innovators can create solutions within the smart city framework.
The goal of Living Lab is two-fold. One, to attract new solutions to persistent city problems, and two, to be able to test and commercialize technology that is of civic interest.
Herb Sih, managing partner at Think Big Partners, said that this platform will come to fruition this summer. Soon, local and national tech firms can use Kansas City as a testbed for smart city applications.
“I’m really proud of how Kansas City has come together to collaborate on this project,” Sih said. “We see other cities that are far less collaborative.”
Sih said that the Living Lab is also an economic development initiative and will attract companies from all over the world. Specific areas of focus for its first year will be transportation, public safety, infrastructure, water and energy, he added.
American Public Television may feature KC Smart City
Sih said that national broadcaster American Public Television may produce a feature story on Kansas City’s Smart City. The 48-minute episode would showcase Kansas City’s smart city infrastructure on more than 200 public television stations.
“Hopefully this will be a good opportunity to be able to activate Kansas City and our efforts,” he said. “They’re really putting together a mosaic.”
Sensors’ cost reduction
Bennett said that the city has determined how to “significantly reduce the costs” of the downtown sensors. Beginning this summer, the city will pilot technology that will transform the city’s existing traffic cameras into sensors themselves for the Smart City.
Bennett said the value of the cost savings will depend on what software vendor it chooses, but added the move will eliminate the need for Kansas City to purchase new sensors.
“The analytics will be placed upon the video that the city is already receiving and will give us the same parking and traffic data as the other sensors,” Bennett said. “We are in final discussion with two different firms that can provide this, but we will soon be able to extend the sensor platform throughout the city at a much less expensive proposition.”
Citypost kiosks
Voice search is coming to the 25 downtown Kansas City Citypost kiosks. The kiosks offer passersby such information as events, restaurants, weather, real-time Smart City data and more information.
“Soon enough, people can ask (the kiosks) where the closest Japanese restaurant is from where they’re standing,” said Mike Mainthow, CMO at Smart City Media.
Mainthow added that kiosk advertising sales are climbing, and they are seeing an uptick in proposal requests from bigger brands. Almost a year since they were installed throughout downtown Kansas City, the kiosks have seen about 200,000 user interactions thus far.
Citypost is experimenting with new features to increase pedestrian engagement, such as games and selfie capabilities. The kiosks have also partnered with small businesses who can post messages on the kiosks in real time.

2017 Startups to Watch
stats here
Related Posts on Startland News
Nominations for Techweek 100 list of premier KC innovators close Sept. 9
It’s not a ranking. Techweek 100 celebrates the whole spectrum of individuals and organizations who are impacting the business and technology landscape on a significant scale in cities like Kansas City, organizers said. Nominations close Sunday, Sept. 9. “Honorees include fast-growing technology companies, prominent sector investors, key contributing enablers of the digital ecosystem, those at…
Lenexa teen IDs winning medical solution with Parkinson’s detection tech FacePrint
Stanford University will have to wait. Eighteen-year-old Erin Smith is taking her medical technology venture, FacePrint, on the road. The Johnson County teen has been selected to join two prestigious fellowships to further develop FacePrint, which is a diagnostic and monitoring Tool for Parkinson’s Disease. She’s been tapped for $25,000 from the Davidson Institute for…
Velocity Lee’s Summit gets first big boost from city with $145K innovation investment
A $145,000 allocation for Velocity Lee’s Summit represents the first step in the City of Lee’s Summit getting serious about investing in innovation, said Grant Gooding. “There is a lot of talent in Lee’s Summit and we wanted to give entrepreneurs a place and an ecosystem to foster the development of their businesses,” said Gooding,…
Pure Pitch Rally returning to Techweek with land sharks hungry to invest more than $80K
A frenzy of land sharks ready to bite on startups’ best ideas is gathering at The American restaurant during Techweek to award up to $80,000 in cash and $500,000 in Amazon AWS Activate credits. The one-of-a-kind Pure Pitch Rally event — set for 4 p.m. to 6 p.m. Oct 10 — plays off the hit…
