Jane Jacobs, the urbanist and author of the iconic city commentary The Death and Life of Great American Cities, once said, “Design is people.” This philosophy of directing collaborative planning towards common goals resonates with IBM’s latest philanthropic brainchild, CityForward.org.
The computational research giant IBM unveiled its latest application to the common good at TechWeek 2012, highlighting the connections it hopes will develop as a result of CityForward between policy makers, researchers, and urban dwellers.
CityForward is a free, web-based platform where city officials, researchers, academics, and urbanites can tackle issues such as water and air quality, revitalizing green space, and inner-city crime rates. In combination with IBM’s complex research tools, the platform offers a unique collaborative space that quantifies these issues into explorable trends, patterns, and correlations.
Software like the IBM Cognos Business Intelligence transcribes the city data in user-friendly chunks. Interactive flash-based visualizations make sharing and discussing relevant urban topics fact-based and grounded in observable phenomenon.
The website offers several key features. For example, one could browse available datasets ranging from commute, crime, and GDP, to labor statistics, land area, and vital statistics. One could select from a myriad of data topics such as consumer spending, housing price index, or air quality index, and generate in real time a data visualization for a selected urban territory.
By selecting a series of buzzwords centered around data and location, one could learn about what their neighbors are doing to improve city life, and collaborate with like-minded people in the various subject-centered forums in the CityForward community.
The project’s data collection is currently underway, and any tip on publicly available, city-relevant data can be directed to the CityForward organizers.
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The reviewers also found suggestive evidence that exposure to PM2.5 is positively associated with mortality from coronary heart diseases and exposure to SO2 increases mortality from lung cancer, but the data was insufficient to provide solid conclusions.