Call for Feedback: Smart Places Strategic Framework

· 2 min read
Call for Feedback: Smart Places Strategic Framework

Hills Shire Council seems ahead to listening to any community feedback on the Smart Places Strategic Framework, a plan to smoothen the implementation of ‘smart’ technologies in The Hills.

The draft offers a long-term technique to encourage innovation, sort out urban challenges, entice funding and improve the overall liveability of the area.

The Council says Smart Places presents an observable influence to residents because it eases day-to-day features with using varied technologies and knowledge.

The draft Smart Places Strategic Framework presents six Smart Place themes to information The Hills’ transformation into a “Smart Place.” These embody Movement, Placemaking and Liveability, Economy, Sustainability and Resilience, Digital Inclusion, and Governance.

A significant chunk of the stakeholder investment might be directed on “high development locations and locations” with the highest density of residents, workers, and visitors and large-scale redevelopment and transformation such as Strategic Centres: Norwest, Rouse Hill, and Castle Hill.

The draft framework additionally aligns with the Council’s Precinct Plans for the three Strategic Centres and the Council’s Economic Growth Plan.

Council defines “Smart Places” as areas where technology, data, and innovation are used to extend the efficiency of everyday processes and clear up numerous challenges, thereby promoting a greater standard of living for its residents.

Existing applied sciences and techniques are presently in place, which the draft Smart Place Strategic framework intends to build on for the continual and future implementation of those applied sciences. These present applied sciences embody:

Flood warning methods on some bridges
Remote access to Council sporting services
Solar panels at the Council’s Administration Building
Electric car charging stations on the Waves Fitness and Aquatic Centre
Water stage sensors in some dams
Free public Wi-Fi in main retail centres
Facilitating the submission of types, payments and functions on-line
Increased utilisation of QR Codes
The public exhibition of the Framework opened for the public on thirteen November 2023 and will stay as such until Monday, 11 December 2023, at 5:00 PM. Feedback could be despatched to the Council’s Have Your Say online part right here.

To see a abstract and a downloadable copy of the Draft Smart Places Strategic Framework, visit right here.

After the exhibition, the Council may have its Post-Exhibition in its timeline in early 2024, and might be finalised between early to mid-2024.

https://hillstohawkesbury.com.au/smart-places-strategic-framework-feedback/  of The Hills Shire, Dr Peter Gangemi, talked about the draft proves the Council’s help for selling innovation and stimulating economic benefits.

“Becoming a Smart Place is the greatest way of the longer term,” Mayor Gangemi said.



“This Framework offers a basis for considering how technologies may be responsibly incorporated into our public areas to reinforce them and make these spaces even higher.

“We are encouraging innovation via expertise that can be utilized to extend resilience and safety throughout natural disasters whereas encouraging the uptake of energy-efficient applied sciences to help our native setting thrive.

“The draft Framework also explores how applied sciences can higher help the native economy, making commercial areas more engaging for businesses to arrange store right here.