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In april 2018 keurde de Vlaamse Regering het Besluit voor Collectieve Kennisverspreiding en Collectief Onderzoek en Ontwikkeling (COOCK) goed. COOCK-projecten [1] hebben als doel kennis en prototypes die recent werden ontwikkeld in de schoot van onderzoeksinstellingen over te dragen naar een ruime groep van ondernemingen. Agentschap Innoveren & Ondernemen ( VLAIO ) wil hiermee het effectief toepassen van innovaties in de ondernemingswereld stimuleren en versnellen.
Dit project wil collectieve inzichten rond de ontsluiting van Standaarden en data voor een open ‘gedataficeeerde’ maatschappij in het domein van omgeving en milieu vertalen en implementeren, wat de realisatie van een visie rond een ‘open stad’ zal versnellen. Meer info is te vinden op de specifieke web pagina's van IMEC [2] en [[ VITO ]] [3] . De deelnemende kennisinstellingen zijn universiteit van Antwerpen, universiteit van Gent, [[ VITO ]] en IMEC .
Gezien de synergie tussen de kennis die beschikbaar gesteld wordt binnen Coock Open Stad en VLOCA, zal deze kennis ook via deze kennishub-pagina verspreid worden.
Overzicht Collectieve Workshops
Workshop Datum
Topic
Organisatie
Registratielink
Meer informatie
12/01/2021
Smart Towards a high quality living environment - a pioneering role for Flanders
UGent-Waves, IMEC -Waves
Registratie
Meer informatie
02/02/2021
Connecting, storing and publishing sensor data
IMEC -IDLab Antwerpen
Registratie
Meer informatie
09/02/2021
Open City and its Citizens
IMEC -SMIT
Registratie
Meer informatie
23/02/2021
Publishing and using sensor data as linked open data
IMEC -IDLab Gent
Registratie
Meer informatie
09/03/2021
IoT and Air Quality in Cities part 1 - Air Quality Sensing
VITO & IMEC -NL
Registratie
Meer informatie
23/03/2021
IoT and Air Quality in Cities part 2 - Air Quality Mapping
VITO & IMEC -NL
Registratie
Meer informatie
20/04/2021
Healthy Indoor Quality of Living
Universiteit Antwerpen
Registratie
Meer informatie
27/04/2021
Learnings from international and local smart city initiatives
IMEC -EDiT
Registratie
Meer informatie
04/05/2021
Mobile environmental sensing
VITO
Registratie
Meer informatie
03/06/2021
Building Trust and Value in Data Ecosystems
IMEC -SMIT / DSP Valley
Registratie
Meer informatie
↑ https://www.vlaio.be/nl/nieuws/vlaio-stimuleert-brede-verspreiding-van-kennis-en-innovatie
↑ https://www . IMEC .be/nl/r-d-samenwerking/coperatieve-r-d-samenwerking/coock-brengt-r-d-naar-het-bedrijfsleven/open-stad
↑ https://vito.be/nl/open-stad
BUILDING TRUST AND VALUE IN IN DATA ECOSYSTEMS
Data can be exchanged between companies and governments, from governments to companies and can even be exchanged between citizens. Yet, if there is no trust between these actors, societal and business value cannot be created on a sustainable way. Today, the lack of trust is a major barrier to exchange data.
How to build trust in complex ecosystems and create value from your data?
During this webinar you will learn more about how different stakeholders can exchange data into the entire ecosystem in a trustworthy way. We will answer some of the following questions: How can value be created, captured and shared in the context of a data ecosystem? How can data quality be ensured? Can companies, governments and the citizens trust the data ecosystem with their data? Is the data exchange reliable?
Date: June 3 rd , 14:00 - 16:00
Registration: https://share.hsforms.com/1yg4-bvtvRPmVhtsHwvrXzQ42q9f
Registered participants will receive the MS Teams-link a few days before the
meeting.
Slides
You can download the slides here:
The workshop can be rewatched on Youtube
Agenda (2h online event)
14:00 - 14:10
Welcome. Juanita Devis, imec-SMIT
14:10 - 14:30
Data ecosystems and Value Models in the open city: what are we talking about. Mark De Colvenaer DSP Valley
14:30 - 15:00
A framework for understanding value and trust in data ecosystems and an interactive discussion (part 1). Ruben D’Hauwers, imec-SMIT
15:00 - 15:05
Break
15:05 - 15:45
A framework for understanding value and trust in data ecosystems and an interactive discussion (part 2). Ruben D’Hauwers, imec-SMIT
15:45 - 16:00
Wrap-up and next steps +
An open city allows urban challenges to be tackled using data. On the one hand, data must be shared in a uniform and scalable manner so that it forms the foundation for building specific views for a particular domain. On the other hand, the data (especially in the case of sensors as a data source) must be of sufficiently high quality so that true visualization models can be built. All these aspects are dealt with in a bottom-up, three-part COOCK workshop. This workshop is part one. Here you can find the second and third part.
Date: Tuesday January 26 th 2021, 10:00 - 11:40
Registration: TBA
Registered participants will receive the zoom-link a few days before the
meeting.
Topics
This workshop (part one) is built up as follows:
We will start with a practical look at connecting sensors in the smart city.
We will continue with the different levels of interoperability that will be discussed in order to store and unlock this data and how this works concretely within the infrastructure of IDLab (Internet and Data science Lab).
Finally, research results will be shared about publishing real-time data as open data.
Agenda (2h online event)
10:00 - 10:05
Intro by IMEC -EDIT, Stefan Lefever
10:05 - 10:35
How to connect sensors today? by IDLab Antwerp, Bart Braem
10:35 - 10:55
Minimum Interoperability Mechnanisms and more by IMEC -EDIT, Stefan Lefever
11:05 - 11:20
General introduction to NGSI & available tools by IDLab Ghent, Philip Leroux
11:20 - 11:30
Open Data Learnings from IMEC CityOfThings project "Observer" by IDLab Ghent, Brecht Van de Vyvere
11:30 - 11:40
Wrap-up and Q&A +
An open city allows urban challenges to be tackled using data. On the one hand, data must be shared in a uniform and scalable manner so that it forms the foundation for building specific views for a particular domain. On the other hand, the data (especially in the case of sensors as a data source) must be of sufficiently high quality so that true visualization models can be built. All these aspects are dealt with in a bottom-up, three-part COOCK workshop. This workshop is part one. Here you can find the second and third part.
Date: Tuesday February 2 nd 2021, 9:00 - 11:00
Registration: https://share.hsforms.com/1zgYrsrb_TzC6aW9bX8HlYQ42q9f
Registered participants will receive the zoom-link a few days before the
meeting.
Topics
This workshop (part one) is built up as follows:
We will start with a practical look at connecting sensors in the smart city.
We will continue with the different levels of interoperability that will be discussed in order to store and unlock this data and how this works concretely within the infrastructure of IDLab (Internet and Data science Lab).
Finally, research results will be shared about publishing real-time data as open data.
Agenda (2h online event)
9:00 - 9:05
Intro by IMEC -IDLab Antwerp, Bart Braem
9:05 - 9:25
How to connect sensors today? by IMEC -IDLab Antwerp, Johan Bergs
Presentation:
9:25 - 9:45
Minimum Interoperability Mechnanisms and more by IMEC -EDIT, Stefan Lefever
Presentation:
10:00 - 10:20
General introduction to NGSI & available tools by IMEC -IDLab Ghent, Philip Leroux
Presentation:
Bestand:Coock Workshop NGSI v02.pdf
10:20 - 10:40
Open Data Learnings from IMEC CityOfThings project "Observer" by IMEC -IDLab Ghent, Brecht Van de Vyvere
Presentation:
10:40 - 11:00
Wrap-up and Q&A +
We usually ventilate our homes by opening windows or by using automatic ventilation but is this incoming air really that fresh? Or do we only make it worse by bringing in polluted outdoor air? Smart ventilation controlled by indoor and outdoor air quality, air purification in ventilation systems or in coatings on walls and windows, green facades that purify incoming air, a network of sensors that measure air quality online, ... The possibilities for the improvement of Indoor Air Quality (IAQ) are numerous and diverse but until now only rarely applied in practice. This workshop will define the problem and discuss the most important indoor pollutants, give an overview of what to measure and how to do it and pitch several technologies that can aid to purify indoor air.
Date: Tuesday April 20 th 2021, 10:00 - 12:00
Registration: https://share.hsforms.com/1IgRlXOjbTluP1nQTrKC7Ww42q9f
Registered participants will receive the conference-link a few days before the
meeting.
Agenda (2h online event)
10:00 - 10:05
Intro, Linus De Roo (UAntwerpen)
10:05 - 10:50
Sources of indoor pollution and what/how to measure it, Marianne Stranger ( VITO )
10:50 - 11:15
CO2 sensing and analytics in smart buildings, Valerio Panzica La Manna ( IMEC -NL)
Presentation:
11:15 - 11:45
Air purification technologies, Linus De Roo (UAntwerpen)
Presentation:
11:45 - 12:00
Q&A
You can watch this workshop on Youtube here +
IoT and Air Quality in Cities part 1: Air Quality Sensing
In the last years, many air quality sensors and data solutions have emerged in response to the need for a higher air pollution monitoring resolution in cities. However, caution is needed as low-cost sensors are generally less accurate, show drift over time and are cross-sensitive to other pollutants or meteorological conditions. Moreover, a dedicated hardware setup is needed meeting the demands of your specific use case. This workshop will guide you in a stepwise approach towards a sensor-based solution, including choosing the right sensor for the specific application, and required data calibration and validation.
Date: Tuesday March 09 rd 2021, 09:00 - 11:00
Registration: https://share.hsforms.com/11l49Ol22R7-3AG3VlZO2Ow42q9f
Registered participants will receive the MS Teams-link a few days before the
meeting.
Speakers:
Valerio Panzica La Manna and Jelle Hofman (IMEC-NL), Martine Van Poppel and Jan Peters (VITO)
Slides
Agenda (2h online event)
09:00 - 09:15
Introduction: Air Quality and IoT
09:15 - 10:00
Data quality & calibration
10:00- 10:45
Choosing the right sensor and set-up for your application
11:45 - 12:00
Wrap-up and Q&A +
IoT and Air Quality in Cities part 2: Air Quality Modelling
Over the past years, interest in air quality has increased resulting in many smart city solutions. This workshop will present an overview of air quality modelling for smart city applications, including refining air pollution maps by incorporating data from emerging sensor networks. Besides improving the real-time information, models can be applied to predict future air quality, predict scenarios, anddetermine sources of air pollution, linking to smart ventilation in smart buildings.
Date: Tuesday March 23 rd 2021, 10:00 - 12:00
Registration: https://share.hsforms.com/1ka2R54OuTwOZ-oTlKj9HlA42q9f
Registered participants will receive the MS Teams-link a few days before the
meeting.
Speakers:
Stijn Vranckx and Jorge Sousa (VITO), Jelle Hofman (IMEC-NL)
Slides
You can watch the video of the workshop on Vimeo
Agenda (2h online event)
10:00 - 10:15
Introduction: Air Quality Modelling and Smart city applications
10:15 - 11:00
Improved air quality information through coupling of sensors and models
11:00- 11:20
Modelling the indoor & outdoor environment of smart buildings
11:20- 11:40
Identification of air pollution sources and screening of air quality solutions
11:40 - 12:00
Q&A +
An open city allows urban challenges to be tackled using data. On the one hand, data must be shared in a uniform and scalable manner so that it forms the foundation for building specific views for a particular domain. On the other hand, the data (especially in the case of sensors as a data source) must be of sufficiently high quality so that true visualization models can be built. All these aspects are dealt with in a bottom-up, three-part COOCK workshop.
This workshop (part three) is built up as follows:
We start with an overview of state-of-the-art data platforms and which interoperability principles are followed.
Next, the learnings of rolling out a network of air quality sensors in the Smart Zone in Antwerp will be explained.
Finally, the processes, tooling and used semantic standards of the City of Things projects Databroker, MoDi and ANPR are explained.
Here you can find the first and second part.
Date: Tuesday April 27 th 2021, 10:00 - 12:00
Registration: https://share.hsforms.com/1-EmQ5yddT6GrAPeWYor0FA42q9f
Registered participants will receive the conference-link a few days before the
meeting.
Agenda (2h online event)
10:00 - 10:10
Intro by IMEC -EDIT, Stefan Lefever
10:10 - 10:50
How is the international ecosystem evolving? by IMEC -EDIT, Stefan Lefever
Slides:
10:50 - 11:10
Learnings from the Antwerp smart zone by IMEC -NL, Valerio Panzica La Manna
Slides: Bestand:2021-04-27-COOCK-AQ-LessonLearned-Workshop.pdf
11:10 - 11:35
Learnings from VLAIO CityOfThings support (Databroker, MoDi and ANPR ) by IMEC -IDLab Ghent, Brecht Van de Vyvere
Slides: Bestand:COOCK Workshop - Learnings from international and local smart city initiatives.pdf
11:35 - 12:00
Wrap-up and Q&A +
Mobile Environmental Monitoring
Over the past years, interest in high spatially resolved data of environmental parameters has increased, in order to better assess personal exposure, hot spots, … etc. The emergence of IoT (Internet of Things) and sensor technology enable new generation of mobile sensor units and its deployment at unprecedented scale. Mobile sensor networks, deployed in vehicles, bikes, or as personal devices, offer the benefit of larger spatio-temporal coverage at a fraction of the deployment and maintenance cost. However, mobile monitoring poses additional technical challenges, that need to be addressed before its wide adoption.
This workshop will provide an overview of the challenges and opportunities of mobile environmental sensing of different environmental parameters. Based on existing pilots and projects conducted in recent years, lessons learned will be provided to apply this technology in future smart city applications. We will present the use of mobile monitoring in different domains: air quality, sound and vibration and electromagnetic fields.
Date: Tuesday May 04 th 2021, 10:00 - 12:00
Registration: https://share.hsforms.com/1W5fiORm0Tb65P2Ek9XjIkw42q9f
Registered participants will receive the MS Teams-link a few days before the
meeting.
Agenda (2h online event)
10:00 - 10:15
Mobile monitoring: A general introduction, Martine Van Poppel (VITO)
Presentation:
10:15 - 10:35
Mobile monitoring using airQmap: data analysis and lessons learned, Jan Peters/Martine Van Poppel (VITO)
Presentation:
10.35 - 10.55
Mobile Air Quality in Antwerp on postal vans, Jelle Hofman (IMEC-NL)
Presentation:
10.55 - 11.15
Road traffic noise as proxy for traffic: multidisciplinary applications, policy support and smart city potential, Luc Dekoninck (UGent)
Presentation:
11.15 - 11.35
Denoising of opportunistic mobile measurements, Dick Botteldooren (UGent)
11.35 - 11.55
Mobile Measuring of Electromagnetic Fields, Wout Joseph (UGent)
Presentation:
11:55 - 12:00
Wrap-up
You can watch this workshop on Youtube here
This webinar is organized in the context of the Coock ‘Open City’ Project and deals with the topic of involving citizens in an open city. Not only can citizens provide local governments with necessary data to tackle certain challenges through citizen science projects, the government from its side can open up its data for re-use to develop certain solutions by its citizens. This raises certain questions: How can citizens be engaged in citizen science projects? How can collected data be made available towards other citizens and companies? During this webinar we will answer these questions.
Date: Tuesday February 9 th 2021, 13:00 - 15:00
Registration: https://share.hsforms.com/1wLbv15oDSpuuB6UNQoKbew42q9f
Registered participants will receive the zoom-link a few days before the
meeting.
Topics
This workshop addresses following themes:
Main principles of open data;
How standardization with OSLO works
How to engage citizens: communication strategies for civic science.
Agenda (2h online event)
13:00 - 13:15
Intro by IMEC -SMIT, Koen Borghys
13:15 - 13:50
How to engage citizens: communication strategies for citizen science by IMEC -SMIT, Carina Veeckman
Presentation:
13:50 - 14:25
What is Open Data? by IMEC -SMIT, Koen Borghys
Presentation:
14:25 - 14:45
What are the OSLO principles? by IMEC -IDLab Ghent, Brecht Van de Vyvere
Presentation:
14:45 - 15:00
Wrap-up by IMEC -SMIT, Koen Borghys +
An open city allows urban challenges to be tackled using data. On the one hand, data must be sharedin a uniform and scalable manner forming the foundation of domain-specific views. On the otherhand, the data must be of sufficiently high quality so that true visualization models can be built.In this COOCK Open City workshop, we will deep-dive into best-practices for sharing data on the Web, and what you can expect from Artificial Intelligence. This workshop is part two of a COOCK workshop-serie. Here you can find the first and third part.
Date: Tuesday February 23 rd 2021, 10:00 - 12:00
Registration: https://share.hsforms.com/1ROLoEmNlSJiFi7xRPiyZTA42q9f
Registered participants will receive the zoom-link a few days before the
meeting.
Agenda (2h online event)
10:00 - 10:05
Intro by IMEC -IDLab Ghent, Brecht Van de Vyvere
10:05 - 10:20
What is (Linked) Open Data? by IMEC -SMIT, Nils Walravens
Presentation:
10:20 - 11:15
Best practices with sharing data with third parties by IMEC -IDLab Ghent, Pieter Colpaert and Brecht Van de Vyvere
Presentation:
Bestand:Best-practices-with-sharing-data-with-third-parties.pdf
11:15 - 11:45
From high quality data to reliable AI by IMEC -IDLab Antwerp, Bart Braem
Presentation:
Bestand:Intro-to-ai.pdf
11:45 - 12:00
Wrap-up and Q&A
You can watch this workshop on Youtube here: Youtube-link +
The aim of this workshop is to unite knowledge institutions, policy makers, and
companies in order to make Flanders an exemplary region in the field of smart
monitoring and management of the living environment. A good living
environment is experienced as pleasant, invites healthy behavior and causes the
lowest possible pressure on health. Within the Coock project the emphasis is
on noise, air, and electromagnetic radiation. In addition to monitoring the
situation and the impact on residents and users, a smart policy also requires a
link to the pressure that activities exert on this living environment. Traffic and
transport are important, but certainly not the only driving forces.
Date: Tuesday January 12 th 2021, 13:00
Registration: https://share.hsforms.com/1cgEjeBmvQk-PC-AcpUQQcw42q9f
Registered participants will receive the zoom-link a few days before the
meeting.
Topics
From data to knowledge and prediction; trend analysis; interpolation between measurements; ...
Living environment quality data: how to deal with a diversity of data; exchange of data between initiatives; ...
New sensors in a smart city context and their integration; personal exposure monitoring; ...
Agenda (4h online event)
Ongoing policy initiatives (introduced by government institutions)
Introduction of topics Noise, Electromagnetic, Air quality – followed by workshop with stakeholders
Introduction data collection, modelling, knowledge extraction – followed by workshop with stakeholders
Contributions from:
Van Campenhout Karen / Hans Reynders (Departement Omgeving),
Christophe Stroobants ( VMM )
Dick Botteldooren / Luc Dekoninck (UGent),
Wout Joseph / David Plets ( IMEC )
Martine Van Poppel ( VITO )
Valerio Panzica La Manna ( IMEC )
Presentations +
NGSI intro +
MIMs and beyond +
Open Data Learnings from Observer +
Create-IoT +
Een Cross-Domain toepassing is cross-cutting . Dat wil zeggen dat deze om effectief gerealiseerd te worden toegang nodig heeft tot informatie die normaal bevat zit in verschillende (en mogelijk legacy) silos of data-verzamelingen. AIOTI [1] beschrijft dit verder en geeft ook voorbeelden in het Smart City landschap.
↑ https://aioti.eu/wp-content/uploads/2018/06/AIOTI-WG08-Smart-City-Replication-Guidelines-Part-1-Cross-Domain-Use-Cases-V1.0-with-new-logo.pdf +
"Cross-Cutting" is een adjectief dat gebruikt wordt om aan te geven dat bepaalde aspecten of functionaliteiten een impact hebben op verschillende onderdelen van het systeem, en dus niet beperkt zijn tot bijvoorbeeld 1 component of 1 stuk code.
Deze "Cross-cutting Concerns" of Transversale aandachtspunten moeten dus globaal beheerd worden over alle aspecten en componenten van een systeem of architectuur. Een typisch voorbeeld is veiligheid, aangezien binnen geconnecteerde systemen elk onderdeel een mogelijke zwakke schakel kan zijn in de beveiliging van het geheel.
We spreken bij geconnecteerde smart city systemen over een groot "gevaar oppervlak": gezien alle componenten op de een of andere manier geconnecteerd zijn en fysiek gezien op andere plaatsen kunnen uitgerold worden, "snijdt" het aspect veiligheid doorheen het volledige systeem en moet dit dus globaal bekeken worden. Meer informatie is te vinden op Wikipedia [1]
↑ https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cross-cutting_concern +
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