Open data & urban inclusion — by Mar Santamaría

By  | 2024

Open and transparent data has been proven to be valuable for gaining insights and crafting better public policies. It is especially useful for visualizing and addressing the needs of citizens in the most unfavorable situations, enabling public administrations to tackle these challenges and improve cities. However, as mentioned by Mar Santamaría, we have recently observed a setback in terms of its availability.

How can we then keep building spatial justice through data? How can data science include the most vulnerable? In an upcoming episode of our series focusing on the trends shaping today’s urban landscape, we delve into how open data can positively impact urban inclusion with the co-founder and director of 300.000 Km/s – a Barcelona-based urban planning agency aimed at making cities the most livable places on the planet.

#ExpertVoices | 2024 x E04

Open data & urban inclusion — by Mar Santamaría —

How can we leverage open data to make better cities?

It is very important that data remains open. I think in the last 10 years we have been seeing the potential of using data to increase knowledge, to create better public policies. But now the access to data is becoming less and less and less open, and that is a risk because we need data to inform public decisions, we need the processes to be transparent, and we need public administrations to rely on data they can use for making cities better. So it is really important that data remains open, transparent, acknowledgeable, and that public bodies keep it as a kind of sovereignty.

How can data science include the most vulnerable?

Including the most vulnerable parts of society in data can be done by actively engaging them, which is the most difficult part. What I mean with active is to build upskills in people using low tech methodologies, that can somehow make them more active in the planing processes. But also using passive methodologies. At the moment we are able to datify some aspects that take into account these vulnerable parts of the society to include them in the urban agendas and that is very important.

📣 How can open and transparent data help us build spatial justice in cites? #CitiesToBe by @Anteverti discusses this issue with Mar Santamaría, co-founder and director of @300000kms 👇🏽 Clic para tuitear

How can we build spatial justice through data?

In all the work that we are trying to do related to public policies, spatial justice is a motto. How with data we are able to visualize and put in a territory the urgencies is very important. And that can be done using, in our case, cartography. We have developed a tool called «Open Papers» that actually engages volunteers in large census processes. That has been used for example in the city of Barcelona to count homeless people. They are really at the lowest level and are not datified at all, so we need a lot of people to look for them.

How would you like Cities To Be in 10 years?

In 10 years I would like cities to be again this mechanism of collective survival. More equal, more equative, greener and more sustainable.

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Interview and edition by Sergio García i Rodríguez,
Head of Communication at Anteverti & CitiesToBe Executive Editor, Martina Jané i Curtu, Comms specialist at Anteverti, and Marta Bugés.

Video by Eloy Calvo and Cristóbal Sarría Chitty

About the authors

Co-founder of 300.000 Km/s | + posts

Mar Santamaria-Varas is an architect graduated from the School of Architecture of Barcelona.

Her professional activity has been related in the last 15 years to digital technologies, spatial analysis, urban planning and public policies at an international level. As the co-founder of 300.000 Km/s, she has elaborated strategic reports, diagnoses, guidelines, data observatories and master plans in the field of environmental health, regulation of economic activity, new forms of mobility, housing vulnerability, data and digital divide, among others. She has also coordinated several participatory workshops for both professionals and non-specialised public.

She is a pioneer in Spain in the use of open data for urban policies (Associate from the Open Data Institute) and the fostering of digital/data skills among citizenship. She has collaborated as an expert in the participatory drafting of the Spanish and Catalan 2030 Urban Agendas.

She has been an associate professor in the Department of Town Planning and Territorial Planning of the School of Architecture of Barcelona for more than ten years. She has also a lectured at several international faculties (EPFL Lausanne, Welsh School of Architecture, TU Braunschweig, School of Architecture of Barcelona, IAAC, among others) and public institutions.

She has written several scientific publications and other articles for a wide public published in relevant national and international reviews and media.

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