Cities have been getting bigger for many years now, and this trend is expected to continue throughout the 21st century. This creates many challenges for cities that want to provide a sustainable, safe and liveable environment for their ever-increasing population. In recent years, the vision of ‘smart cities’ has been proposed as one way to tackle these challenges, where various technologies are deployed to monitor and analyse different aspects of urban life, and to manage the provision of urban services. While being a promising solution, smart cities can be very complex, difficult to understand and closed-off, which can make citizens feel powerless, excluded and controlled by the complex technologies, hard-to-grasp processes and opaque services in a smart city. The overall goal of GEO-C (Joint Doctorate in Geoinformatics – Enabling Open Cities) was therefore to train a group of young researchers so that they could tackle these problems in academia, industry and society. In addition, the project aimed to develop methods and tools to realise smart and open cities, which empower all groups of society to participate on all levels and to benefit in many ways. More specifically, GEO-C focussed on investigating new approaches for smart and open cities that
• that enable transparent participation on equal footing for all citizens,
• that facilitate data analysis to determine the quality of life for individuals and cities, and
• that deliver useful services for smart cities based on the principle of openness.
Three research institutions with a proven track record of complementary research areas in Geoinformatics worked together with city councils and companies from three European countries: The academic partners consisted of the University of Münster (WWU), Institute for Geoinformatics (ifgi), Germany, the Universidade Nova de Lisboa (UNL), NOVA Information Management School (NOVA IMS), Portugal and the Universitat Jaume I (UJI), Institute for New Imaging Technologies (iNIT), Spain. They were joined by three city councils (Münster, Lisbon, Castellón) and six local companies (Hansa Luftbild, 52 North GmbH, ESRI Portugal, SAS Portugal, Urbiotica S.L. Prodevelop S.L.). Together all partners engaged with different stakeholders, shaped the underlying research and supported fifteen early-stage researchers (ESRs) in their research and career development.