China Trade Expert Visits SMART

A NSW Government trade and investment specialist from China is visiting the Illawarra this week, including UOW’s main campus and Innovation Campus, to explore opportunities for education and research links between NSW and China.

The visit by NSW Trade & Investment Commissioner (South China and Hong Kong), Ms Cher Jones, from Guangzhou in China, will help to further build ties between Guangzhou and Illawarra education and research providers.

She visited SMART Infrastructure to meet staff and discuss how their research capabilities might be applied to building and development projects in China.

Read More in UOW Campus News

SMART Project Selected in Twitter Data Grant Pilot

SMART’s Map Jakarta (petajakarta) project has been selected as one of only six world-wide and the only Australian entry, to receive free datasets in the first ever Twitter #DataGrant project from the social media giant.

Map Jakarta is a web-based platform used to harness the power of social media to gather, sort, and display information about flooding for Jakarta residents in real time. The platform runs on the open source software platform CogniCity – a GeoSocial Intelligence Framework developed at the SMART Infrastructure Facility – which allows data to be collected and disseminated by community members through their location-enabled mobile devices.

Urban Resilience: Meeting the Global Challenge of Coastal Climate Adaptation from schrinkrapt on Vimeo.

Agent-based modelling on the cloud for infrastructure planning

Rails Converging

A Sydney with smarter transport systems is becoming more possible through the work of our Research Director Pascal Perez and IT Architect Matthew Berryman. They have built a decision support tool to help transport and land planners better understand the feedback between changes in land use and changes to Sydney’s transportation networks.

A key component of the model is a synthetic population. “We have their age, income, any preferred travel modes because we’re interested in transport, where they live where they work, We can put in where they like to shop”, says Matthew.

But there’s no need to get nervous about individual privacy: “We do work with the individual records from transport, actual people’s information, but we then turn into what is called ‘synthetic population’. We’re not actually dealing with real people, it’s dealing with a representation of people that, in a way, matches the properties of the population. We don’t actually have Joe Bloggs in there, age 31, but we have a certain number of people in the 30-35 age bracket with a certain amount of income, living in certain areas.”

The tool is not about providing a predictive model, but a model to explore the tipping points of the system, and to gain insights into human behaviour under different scenarios. These scenarios may range from different forecast populations to different transportation options, like a metro rail system, more frequent buses or more light rail.

To explore the different scenarios, and provide an understanding of the variability of these tipping points, the simulation must be run multiple times. Because of this, and the integration of different software components (including the model software, database, statistical processing software), the model is packaged up and deployed to a private cloud that SMART, in conjunction with UOW Information Technology Services, funded and built to provide IT infrastructure to this and other projects (for example, Map Jakarta). 

GeoSocial Intelligence

Social media, driven by the explosive uptake in mobile computing, has caused a systematic shift in personal communications on a global scale. From the Arab Spring to the Occupy Movement it is apparent that social media is becoming an integrated part of our global communication infrastructure. Continue reading

How to attract foreign firms to do Australian infrastructure

By Garry Bowditch

This article was originally published on The Conversation.
Read the original article.

Australia’s two biggest construction companies, Leighton and Lend Lease, control a significant share of construction – up to 75% in cases such as major rail projects.

The recent Productivity Commission draft report on public infrastructure found their combined “market shares would appear sufficient to allow them to exercise market power to inflate prices and/or profits”.

At the same time, the Commission noted that no evidence exists to support such a proposition. A more important unanswered question remains – what conditions are necessary to attract foreign firms to help Australia deliver cheaper, faster and better infrastructure?

Looking abroad for solutions can solve some problems, but in the case of infrastructure, Australia must first do some necessary and overdue housekeeping before multinational construction companies would be interested in pursuing a long-term presence in the country.

Continue reading

Microsoft to Visit UOW

Microsoft is coming to UOW for a special event to be held at SMART Infrastructure.

The tech giant is recruiting for US and Australian positions and students are encouraged to bring their resumes along. There will be two sessions, targeted to computer science and engineering students but open to all.

See this Facebook post from Careers Central for more information.

Hockey attacks ‘corporate and middle class welfare’ as he outlines G20 agenda

In this article in The Conversation, Garry Bowditch argues:

There are a number of factors required to improve the attractiveness of infrastructure as a long-term investment for private funding

These include high design and construction costs, low asset utilisation owing to poor demand management and a reliance on a narrow revenue base such as user charges.

Read the full piece here.

Why It’s the Last Chance for Infrastructure Australia

By Garry Bowditch, for The Financial Review.

In the modern life cycle of government agencies, Infrastructure Australia (IA) has done well to secure a second life with the Abbott government. The challenge now is to deliver more tangible results, as it might be its last chance to do so.

IA has witnessed in its lifetime a dramatic escalation in the cost of infrastructure in Australia, making it one of the most expensive jurisdictions in the world to build mega-projects. As a result taxpayers have suffered poor value for money for each dollar spent. Surprisingly there has been little focus on this by IA.

Read the rest at The Financial Review.