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A suite of smart tools to achieve Makassar’s sombere vision

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April 2022

Like many port cities, Makassar is a thriving trading hub with rapid urbanization and a diverse economy. Situated along the Makassar Strait in the South Sulawesi, the city is one of the largest in Indonesia. To stay on this progressive trajectory, while ensuring sustainable development, the local government has set its sights on becoming a world-class city, banking on a sombere and smart city philosophy.

 

Sombere means great hospitality, great humility, and great brotherhood,” according to Makassar Mayor Moh. Ramdhan Pomanto, speaking in Bahasa Indonesian. “It is a Makassar word that has many meanings… and we combine this with smart city,” he added. The idea is to have what the government calls ‘heartware’ alongside the hardware and software associated with technology, to make citizens both smart and hospitable.

 

For the ASEAN Australia Smart Cities Trust Fund (AASCTF), this perspective of ‘putting people first’ is the cornerstone of the Makassar Livable City Plan project.

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Specific Interventions Supported 

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The Makassar Livable City Plan project is the first task order under the AASCTF program, which is funded by the Government of Australia, managed by ADB, and developed and implemented by global consulting firm Ramboll. The project intends to deliver a strategic citywide framework that integrates existing smart city plans, actions, and initiatives to support the city’s Medium-Term Development Plan. This will enable the local government to prioritize strategies and interventions that contribute to their sombere and smart, world-class city goal.

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There are three main components: of the Makassar Livable City Plan first, there is an Urban Situation Assessment, which provides an understanding of the city, its challenges, and needs; second, an interactive Urban Development Scenario report, which reviewed plans and projections for city development; and third is the centerpiece of the project—the Makassar Livable City Plan (MLCP), which builds on the first two components and comprises an extensive package of plans, smart tools and platforms, a document library, instructional videos, and a stakeholder engagement report. 

In developing this suite of information and tools, the stakeholder engagement was an essential part. About 2,104 residents participated in a survey conducted in five select districts. The survey enabled citizens to feel involved in the development of their city by sharing their views on the quality of- and access to services. The AASCTF team, meanwhile, was able to gauge the perceptions and priorities of people across different demographic groups, which helped in identifying interventions that the city can consider as part of the MLCP. According to the results (which have been developed into an online dashboard), flood early warning systems, safe streets, and fire hazard and rescue are among the most important services to improve.

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Arifuddin Rahman, one of the respondents, expressed his approval of the survey. Translated to English, he said: “This kind of survey has actually never been done here before, so I think that’s very good … I hope all of the plans can be done, so development can go well.”

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Plans and recommendations are plenty in the MLCP; and so are the tools and ensuing analysis that back those plans. The web-based GIS platform, ur-scape, developed by the Future Cities Laboratory in Singapore, and INDRA Makassar, a digital climate resilience platform created by Australia’s Commonwealth Scientific and Industrial Research Organisation (CSIRO), both provide digital tools for visualizing spatial data for more informed urban planning. The city, for example, can better appreciate future risk areas (for example, risks due to inundation from sea level rise) when deciding infrastructure investments.

 

Even better perhaps, the MLCP Prioritization Tool takes planning further. The digital dashboard provides an interactive tool containing 64 concrete measures that the city can implement to help reach its vision. Ramboll has evaluated all 64 smart city interventions and integrated comparative scoring into a simple digital interface that allows the user to select interventions or groups of interventions based on complexity, timeframe needed, private investment attractiveness, and level of benefit per sector. Each intervention also has a corresponding city government ranking, which highlights key priorities including digital technology capacity building, data management and security, and integrated digital applications to support governance and public services.

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“The Makassar Livable City Plan is a unique undertaking, for the breadth and depth of the work involved to produce a strategic framework that utilizes digital technologies to build local capacity and support the government’s vision for a smart and livable city,” said Craig Niles, Principal for Urban Planning in Ramboll Australia and team leader of the AASCTF Makassar project. “The Prioritization Tool is one highlight of this, as it aims to strengthen collaboration between agencies in Makassar, promote an integrated or systems approach to urban planning, and maximize the multi-sectoral benefits from the interventions pursued."

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Results and Impact 

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The response from the city has been very encouraging, from the citizen survey to the Urban Situation Assessment and Urban Development Scenario reports, and with the potential next phase of the Makassar project already in discussion. While the MLCP will only be finalized and handed over in early 2022, AASCTF may soon be working on capacity building to support Makassar City Government build its digital skills and capabilities. Future tasks may include supporting data management via a digital city ecosystem, which focuses on establishing a scalable, comprehensive database for Makassar that can power a range of applications to support public services and smart livable city initiatives.

 

Overall, Mayor Pomanto has shown optimism with the Makassar Livable City Plan project. He said, “We have high hopes that the ASEAN Australia Smart Cities Trust Fund will be able to help Makassar City, since we need a lot of support in smart city development and sustainable technology."

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This article was published as part of the AASCTF Annual Progress Report 2021

UPDATE: The completed Makassar Livable City Plan project was endorsed by ADB and turned over to the Makassar city government in June 2022.

 

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Prioritisation Tool Screenshot_220114.JPG

One of the smart tools part of the Makassar Livable City Plan package is the Prioritization tool, a digital dashboard using Microsoft’s Power BI software to showcase specific interventions to turn Makassar into a sombere and smart city (photo: AASCTF).

This kind of survey has actually never been done here before, so I think that’s very good … I hope all of the plans can be done, so development can go well.

 

Arifuddin Rahman
Makassar resident

We have high hopes that the ASEAN Australia Smart Cities Trust Fund will be able to help Makassar City, since we need a lot of support in smart city development and sustainable technology.

 

Moh. Ramdhan Pomanto
Mayor of Makassar

AUTHOR

  • Elga Reyes, AASCTF

ADB's Vision of Livable Cities

Strategy 2030 of ADB identified “Making Cities More Livable” as one of its seven operational priorities. Under this operational priority, ADB works to support the transformation of developing cities in the Asia and Pacific region into safe, inclusive, and sustainable urban centers. Read more.

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This website is a knowledge sharing platform of the ADB Urban Sector Group. The views expressed in this website are the views of the respective author/s and do not necessarily reflect the views or policies of ADB, or its Board of Governors, or the governments they represent. ADB does not guarantee the accuracy of the data included in this website and accepts no responsibility for any consequence of their use. Terminology used may not necessarily be consistent with ADB official terms and designations.

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