News
The Challenge of Extreme Climate Change for Critical Infrastructure and Cities
The likelihood of extreme climate change The IPCC uses four pathways of potential carbon emissions to define the range of scenarios that we might face under different rates of emissions that will arise directly and indirectly from human activity. These Representative Concentration Pathways (RCP) are defined by the peak of radiative forcing (amount of increased solar energy that will be absorbed by the atmosphere) they will create by the year 2100. For instance, RCP2.6 is based upon an increase of [...]
Introducing Urban Champions
For the past year, a very talented group of students from the University of Sheffield have been working on a project assigned by the Urban Flows Observatory. Five students in their second year of the Sheffield Engineering Leadership Academy (SELA) were given the challenge of maximising the use of the Observatory’s MOBIle Urban Sensing vehicle, MOBIUS to promote our activities, engaging with policy-makers and the general public. The Project Brief In September 2018 the SELA students met with Steve Jubb, [...]
Calling all hackers, designers, data visualisers, developers and coders!
This year Urban Flows are collaborating with Sheffield Technology Parks to bring you an exciting competition for creative ideas and practical solutions which will contribute to our ground breaking research. We are looking for individuals and project teams to develop new and innovative software solutions to help monitor urban energy and resource flows in the city of Sheffield. We have got interesting datasets from fixed and mobile sensors based around Sheffield including temperature, humidity and air pressure. The software you [...]
Air Pollution in Kampala
Back in 2014 I spent a couple of terms lecturing at Makerere University in Kampala, the capital city of Uganda. It was an exciting time! Cycling to and from work, I became a little concerned about two things: car crashes and air pollution. I gave the two MSc students I was supervising projects to monitor these two dangers. At the time, no one was monitoring the air quality in the city at all. With no budget and only an $800/month [...]
Urban Flows work with the David and Jane Richards Family Foundation and local school on IoT network
A secondary school in Sheffield has set up its own Internet of Things network for connected devices to gather data about the environment in the industrial city. The IoT network was made possible by the David and Jane Richards Family Foundation, a charity set up by the founder of WANdisco plc, the public software company jointly headquartered in Silicon Valley and Sheffield. David and Jane launched the registered charity to advance the education of computer science and ecology in state [...]
Agglomeration Potentials and Potential Infrastructural Interventions
A key priority of the Urban Flows Observatory is understanding the flow of energy and resources in Sheffield – and the impact that our use of these has on the environment, economy and wider society. The makeup of our cities, where, and what transport infrastructure is in place, can have a huge influence on these factors. In this blog we take a deep dive into the links between transport and productivity, and how infrastructure interventions could help us build healthy, [...]
Upcoming Events
This one-day symposium hosted by the University of Sheffield will bring together international researchers and practitioners to share leading work progressing towards a circular built environment.
The event aims to facilitate meaningful, bi-directional knowledge transfer and discussion between researchers and practitioners on techniques to both implement and assess circularity within the built environment.
It will be made up of keynote speakers, shorter oral presentations and poster sessions, and we actively encourage attendance of researchers and practitioners from across the built environment and at all career stages.
Find out more about how you can get involved and register your interest in attending here.
More events coming soon…
Past Events
Urbans Flows Observatory and Sheffield Technology Parks are offering funding and support for new software that can help Sheffield become more sustainable, happy and healthy. At a hackathon in November Sheffield’s creative and tech experts are invited to working with datasets linked to the city’s energy and resource flows. Successful ideas from the day will get a share of £50,000 worth of funding.
Taking place on 22 and 23 November (venue TBC) the hackathon is free to join and gives you the chance to work with real data relating to the city’s energy and resource usage.
This work is part of a three-year, multi-million Euro international academic collaboration being carried out the Urban Flows Observatory at the University of Sheffield. In 2017 Urban Flows launched a competition to design prototypes for capturing new data on the city’s temperature, humidity and air pressure. Now they are looking for practical solutions that will put this data to work.
Successful teams will receive funding for their ideas plus a package of support from Sheffield Technology Parks.
This isn’t just for technical experts; Urban Flows wants a whole range of different skills and perspectives on the project. Teams should have a wide skill set including frontend, backend, commercial acumen and project management skills. You can apply as an individual, in which case you’ll be put with a project team, or you can apply as a ready-formed team.
Further information and details on how to apply can be found here.
Urban Flows will be on the road this summer at BlueDot Festival 2019! Join us and representatives from the Grantham Centre and ACSE to find out how tracking flow through the festival site can help us understand how cities work. Try our Virtual Reality headsets, Thermal Cameras, and LIDAR mapping to develop your own real-time data and analysis of the Festival. See you there!
Interested in air quality? Join us for an afternoon of talks and discussions from leading researchers, academics and policy makers in air pollution.
We will be providing a platform for bridging the disciplinary gaps through scholarly dialogue and interdisciplinary exchange.
Urban Flows, together with the Urban Institute and The Grantham Centre for Sustainable Futures are collaborating on the University of Sheffield’s first symposium dedicated to understanding more about air quality and the ways we can influence policy and decision making in our cities to reduce the impact of air
pollution.
More info coming soon!
Air pollution is on the increase across our planet and has serious health implications for us all. So how big a problem is it? What can we do to stop it? And how can we protect ourselves from its harmful effects? Find the answers to these questions and get hands-on with science in a ‘fresh’ citizen-science project on air quality. Attendees will get to build and take home their own Raspberry-Pi powered air quality monitors, and be part of a pioneering research project.
https://pintofscience.co.uk/event/a-breath-of-fresh-air
Date & Time: Thursday 16th May, 17:30-19:00
Location: Lecture Theatre 2, Hicks Building, 226 Hounsfield Road, Sheffield, S3 7RH
This event is a part of the Festival of Debate: www.festivalofdebate.com
Due to decades of over-borrowing from our planet’s natural assets, an environmental collapse is imminent. Everything from clothes to packaging follows a life of ‘take-use-dispose’. By adopting a circular economy, we can reduce the amount of waste we produce. Can this be achieved? Who is responsible? What can be done?
Speakers:
Prof. Tony Ryan OBE (Chair, The University of Sheffield)
Prof. Lenny Koh (The University of Sheffield)
Kevin Vyse (On Pack Recycling Label)
Mary Creagh (MP for Wakefield)
Maya De Souza (DEFRA)
Date & Time: Saturday 4th May, 14:00 – 16:30
Location: The Diamond, 32 Leavygreave Road, MindSphere Lounge, Sheffield, S3 7RD
A workshop has been organised in conjunction with “Clean Air Sheffield” and “Urban Flows Observatory”, The University of Sheffield at which air quality monitoring sensors will be built and kept by the participants for free.The workshop will take place on Saturday 4th May from 2 pm at the MindSphere Lounge in the Diamond Building and is part of a citizen science initiative using low-cost air quality monitors to increase public awareness.
The air quality monitors we will use are based on the German open source project, Luftdaten. The idea of running these workshops here is to handle some of the more tedious and error-prone elements (ordering components, loading their software onto the chips), showing how to build the kits yourself, how to access the real-time data and also to provide some local context on our current air pollution monitoring.
Register here!
The week commencing Monday 15th October marks the start of the University of Sheffield’s Sustainability Week. Each day will see a different talk about how the University is using their power as a research-led university to tackle interlinked social, environmental and economic challenges through ambitious, interdisciplinary thinking.
As part of this we are delivering a ‘Sustainability in the Pub’ talk at the University Arms on Friday 19th October starting at 17:30 where the team will explain what we’re measuring and why, so together we can create healthy, happy cities.
Check out the Eventbrite page to register!
Venue: MindSphere Lounge, The Diamond, University of Sheffield
The Urban Flows Researchers Forum will be a chance to explore existing and potential research activity in the following areas:
1. Weather station data (9am)
2. Air Quality (10am)
3. Thermal Data (11am)
4. Visualisation of data (12pm)
We will be holding one hour sessions on each of the 4 topics listed above, so please come along to whichever session or combination of sessions are of interest.
Venue: MindSphere Lounge, The Diamond, University of Sheffield
Air quality monitoring sensors will be deployed around the city, aiming to collect both spatial and temporal high-resolution Air Quality data. We now have the backend data storage and visualisation software and hardware up and running so we want to now turn our attention to the deployment strategy. The sensors will be measuring various air pollutants and meteorological parameters. The first phase of the sensors will be deployed soon around the University of Sheffield. Phase 2 and Phase 3 of the sensors will be deployed in 2018 and 2019, respectively.
The objective of the workshop is to seek your input to the deployment strategy for the AQSN, in terms of what we should measure and where we should measure it. At present the deployment strategy is planned to respond to the projects outlined in the attached note. This workshop will review these projects and establish other parameters which should influence the locations and technologies to be deployed.
Come and join us for the final pitching event of the Urban Flows Observatory #sensorbuild competition!
Over the past two months, our nine competition entrants have been building prototypes of sensors that can capture data about how energy and resources flow through the city of Sheffield. They now face our panel of experts for the final pitch event, where they will show their prototype, demonstrate how it will capture data, and present how it could be scaled across the city. For the advanced stream entrants, we will also hear how their product could be commercialised.
Our winners will receive a fantastic prize package including a £500 cash prize, support for commercialisation (advanced stream only), and the chance to see their sensors located in Sheffield.
Each pitch is 2 minutes long and judges have 5 minutes for Q&A. There’ll be an opportunity for you to meet the competition entrants and see their prototypes, as well as vote for your favourite in the Popular Vote category. We’ll be providing pizza and beer, with big thanks to our event sponsors, Arup.
Event Schedule (subject to change)
17:30 – 18:00 Arrival, networking, drinks
18:00 – 18:10 Welcome from Martin Mayfield & intro to judging panel
18:10 – 18:30 Guest speaker keynote: Rick Robinson, Digital Property and Cities Leader, Arup
18:30 – 19:00 Novice pitching
19:00 – 19:30 Break for pizza and beer
19:30 – 20:10 Advanced pitching
20:10 – 20:20 Break for beers and for the panel to convene
20:20 – 20:30 Awards including the popular vote
Judging panel
- Steve Jubb – Technical Lead, Urban Flows Observatory
- Mark Gannon – Director, Business Change and Information Solutions at Sheffield City Council
- Samantha Deakin-Hill, Co-Founder, Campus Capital
- David Moss, Digital Programme Manager, Siemens Research
**more judges to be announced soon**
Register your attendance here
Urban Flows will be on the road this summer at BlueDot Festival 2018! Join us and the Grantham Centre to find out how tracking flow through the festival site can help us understand how cities work. Try our Virtual Reality headsets, Thermal Cameras, and LIDAR mapping to develop your own real-time data and analysis of the Festival. See you there!