“…According to literature review, ICT is an essential component in smart city governance to gain necessary intelligence that provides basis for evidence‐based decision‐making. At the core of ICT based solutions are three main components: (i) data collection through sensors, Internet‐of‐Things, smart phones, remote sensing (e.g., satellite or in‐situ) and city databases; (ii) data processing and/or pre‐processing (e.g., filtering, data quality and format translations); (iii) data analysis using machine learning, data mining and other statistical algorithms to generate new knowledge in various cross‐thematic applications such as mobility (Docherty, Marsden, & Anable, ; Peters‐Anders et al, ; Rathore et al,), energy (Antonić, Marjanović, Pripužić, & Žarko, ; Carli, Albino, Dotoli, Mummolo, & Savino, ; Silva, Khan, & Han, ), health (Anisetti et al, ; Farahani et al, ), environment (Antonić et al, ), public services (Pérez‐González & Díaz‐Díaz, ; Zhang et al, ), economy (Chatfield & Reddick, ; Saggi & Jain, ; Zaman et al, ), waste management (Digiesi, Facchini, Mossa, Mummolo, & Verriello, ), social analysis (Kousiouris et al, ; Terroso‐Saenz, Gonzalez‐Vidal, Cuenca‐Jara, & Skarmeta, ), waste water management (Edmondson et al, ), urban planning (Eirinaki et al, ; Pettit et al, ; Rathore, Ahmad, Paul, & Rho, ), tourism and cultural heritage (Sun, Song, Jara, & Bie, ), buildings (Linder, Vionnet, Bacher, & Hennebert, ), agriculture (Kamilaris, Gao, Prenafeta‐Boldu, & Ali, ), emergency response (Abu‐Elkheir, Hassanein, & Oteafy, ), etc. The above three components—with some variations—are common among the most of smart city data analytics literature for example, Zhang et al (); Khan et al (); Rathore et al ().…”