Plymouth has become the first UK city to join the Fab City network, uniting locations across the world in a pledge to produce everything they consume by 2054.
The University of Plymouth, Plymouth College of Art, Plymouth City Council and the Real Ideas Organisation (RIO) have agreed to commit efforts and resources towards producing all the energy, food and products they consume.
They also intend to deploy spiral economy strategies for the relocalisation of production, and the technological empowerment of citizens.
The designation builds on the University’s pioneering research into Smart Cities, and comes as it is creating a new Digital Fabrication Lab and Immersive Visualisation Suite.
Professor Chris Bennewith, Head of the School of Art, Design and Architecture at the University of Plymouth, added:
“This is another example of creative collaboration helping to put Plymouth on the global map as a centre for innovation and ingenuity. Through initiatives such as this, and the iMayflower project announced earlier this year, the city is showing it has the ambition and expertise to keep transforming itself and the people who live, work, study and visit here.
“The University of Plymouth has always prided itself on interdisciplinary research and teaching that has individual and collective sustainability and social responsibility at its core. Our pioneering work on Smart Cities, Big Data, energy and transport – as well as our current investment in a Digital Fabrication Lab – will expand this and ensure Plymouth remains at the forefront of innovation in this area.”
The Fab City Global Initiative was launched in 2016 and now includes 34 participating cities, regions and countries, including Detroit, Amsterdam, Bhutan, Shenzhen, Ekurhuleni, Santiago de Chile, Boston and Paris.
It was created to offer incentive for cities to engage and establish new urban systems that are regenerative and restorative by design, encouraging city leaders to work innovatively to meet progressive social, economic, governance and sustainable development goals.
Signatories to the Fab City manifesto agree to implement ten principles to enable the urban transition towards locally productive and globally connected cities.
The manifesto includes the following pledge:
“We embrace strategies in circular economy and digital social innovation, and foster collaboration between a global network of European and worldwide cities and territories to meet the planetary challenges presented by climate change and social inequalities.”