Smart City Living Lab opens, targets growing pains of a swelling city

August 2, 2017  |  Meghan LeVota

The much-anticipated “Kansas City Living Lab” — a platform for application development that taps the Kansas City Smart City initiative — is now welcoming new tech partners.

Using smart city infrastructure, the Living Lab allows innovators to test and commercialize technologies that can solve problems in Kansas City. The project is led by Think Big Partners and its launch was announced Wednesday at the Gigabit City Summit. 

It’s a meaningful development for a world that sees 3 million people move to a city each week, said Herb Sih, managing partner at Think Big Partners. 54 percent of the world’s population today lives in a city and that number is expected to grow, he said.

“That’s not a bad thing,” Sih said. “Cities are trying to become more vibrant and dense, and with more density comes more economic prosperity.  But, then that brings more problems of traffic, water, public safety and crime.”

The Smart City initiative is a $15.7 million, public-private tech project in downtown Kansas City. Kansas City signed an agreement with Sprint and Cisco in 2016  to create the largest smart city in North America, building a massive public Wi-Fi and sensor network to collect users’ data to improve municipal services.

Since its launch, the initiative has established 328 Wi-Fi 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.

They’re issues the Living Lab can be used to tackle thanks to community partners working to bring the project to fruition, he said.

“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.”  

The Living Lab platform aims to attract innovators to use the city’s existing smart city, gigabit infrastructure. The platform will act as a testbed for technology, giving entrepreneurs access to all the data and tools they need.

“(The Living Lab) will allow entrepreneurs to look at the data that’s already there, due to these sensors, and be able to build and test their ideas,” Sih said. “They’ll be able to understand and evaluate the technology that they’ve built. This helps this technology get into the commercial marketplace, and that’s how you can start making a difference.”

An information session on the Living Lab is planned for August, Sih said.

Tagged , , ,
Featured Business
    Featured Founder
      [adinserter block="4"]

      2017 Startups to Watch

        stats here

        Related Posts on Startland News

        Missouri’s weapon in the AI race with China: KC tech companies, says GOP lawmaker

        By Tommy Felts | October 16, 2025

        As artificial intelligence reshapes the way Kansas City works, civic and elected leaders want to ensure small businesses and the region’s tech community have seats at the table. Federal regulation could help, said Eric Schmitt. “For me, [it’s about] making sure that the big tech companies don’t block out a lot of the innovators, say…

        ECJC carves out early-stage startup track for its popular mentoring program: GMS-Tech

        By Tommy Felts | October 16, 2025

        After a decade boosting Kansas City founders, Growth Mentoring Service at ECJC is expanding to target assistance specifically toward the region’s early-stage technology startups — using the same proven approach: high-impact, team-based mentoring from top-tier business leaders who’ve already been through it. “We have all these amazing volunteer mentors with deep expertise as either technologists…

        Get tickets to the Starty Party: MidxMidwest opens doors to SXSW-flavored startup-investor summit

        By Tommy Felts | October 16, 2025

        Polsinelli-powered celebration at Knuckleheads puts homegrown headliner, community collaboration on stage A trio of innovation-infused collaborators are taking over Knuckleheads — an East Bottoms landmark that perfectly captures the region’s grit, creativity and unmistakable live music vibe, organizers said — for a new community event to help launch MidxMidwest 2025. Doors open at 5:30 p.m.…

        Spaceman drops tracks: Kansas teen raps a midwest mixtape, says he’s ready to launch

        By Tommy Felts | October 15, 2025

        Give Trip Thomas a phone, and the Olathe Northwest High School senior will get his peers talking. Rapping under the name Spaceman, Thomas is staying grounded as he finds his voice through music, he said, and it sounds a lot like resilience. “Music was my therapy,” said Thomas, who started writing from his bedroom at…