Modern connected cities are more and more leveraging advances in ICT to improve their services and the quality of life of their inhabitants. The data generated from different sources, such as environmental sensors, social networking platforms, traffic counters, are harnessed to achieve these end goals. However, collecting, integrating, and analyzing all the heterogeneous data sources available from the cities is a challenge. This article suggests a data lake approach built on Big Data technologies, to gather all the data together for further analysis. The platform, described here, enables data collection, storage, integration, and further analysis and visualization of the results. This solution is the first attempt to integrate a diverse set of data sources from four pilot cities as part of the CUTLER project (Coastal urban development through the lenses of resiliency). The design and implementation details, as well as usage scenarios are presented in this paper.
Abstract:Although air pollution is one of the most significant environmental factors posing a threat to human health worldwide, air quality data are scarce or not easily accessible in most European countries. The current work aims to develop a centralized air quality data hub that enables citizens to contribute to air quality monitoring. In this work, data from official air quality monitoring stations are combined with air pollution estimates from sky-depicting photos and from low-cost sensing devices that citizens build on their own so that citizens receive improved information about the quality of the air they breathe. Additionally, a data fusion algorithm merges air quality information from various sources to provide information in areas where no air quality measurements exist.
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