A smart city is a partnership

1 May 2019 Surveillance, Integrated Solutions

Strength lies in unity, especially when forces join to tackle crime. Without a doubt, it is necessary for a smart city to have integrated public and private safety and security systems. This ensures the highest level of protection for a city and its citizens, without any sector working in a silo. Globally, this is starting to take off, with some very successful use cases proving the importance of partnerships and collaborations between public and private sector, which I have outlined below.

Public-private partnerships spread worldwide

Starting in the United States, a recent example of a real public-private collaborative effort to tackle crime was displayed through a project run in the city of Atlanta. The Atlanta police department launched Operation Shield, a video integration initiative that pulls video resources from private organisations, such as local businesses, and public entities such as public schools, into a single command centre, to provide law enforcement with a more holistic real-time view of situations across the entire city.

Law officials now have access to 24/7 surveillance throughout the city, something that would have been prohibitive before, due to the cost of owning and maintaining all those cameras themselves. Private businesses that share their live video with the police department mutually benefit from a more rapid, better-prepared response toward crime happening on or near their premises. Thus, this project showed a real partnership between the public and private sectors to improve crime prevention efforts.

Similarly, the Minneapolis SafeZone is a collaborative video surveillance and communications project between private security firms and public police forces, which has helped to lower crime rates in the downtown area. The city of Hartford, Connecticut, also minimised crime rates thanks to small businesses and community groups working on the same side as the local police department. You can view a video about the Hartford programme at https://youtu.be/W7kooPy32Bs

Another example of a successful public-private collaborative project is the Project Green Light Detroit, where the police department partners with gas stations across the city and the community to improve neighbourhood and local business safety. The result is a strengthened relationship between public services and private businesses operating in the area.

Heading south, Conectandonos, Mexico, is a project of collaborative video surveillance between private industry, government and the community, which involves sharing the use of IP cameras at zero cost for municipalities, integrating efforts in order to improve security and enhance the quality of life of its citizens.

Moving to Europe, there are some smart city projects in the Netherlands, driven by triple or quadruple public-private helix clusters such as the government, institutions, industries and the community. Stratumseind, a bar street in Eindhoven, is turned into a living lab with innovative technologies. The project started in 2014 and is still running. Generic data of the nightlife crowd is used to influence the mood of the visitors and improve public safety.

In Assen, the police, fire department, paramedics and traffic control keep the crowd safe during the annual biker festival, when more than 100 000 people visit the city. In the city centre of Almere, traffic flow has improved thanks to collaboration between parking management and police forces.

React – respond – resolve

As seen through the above cases, these ‘smart’, connected cities allow the development of a real-time video surveillance system. This allows law enforcement to more accurately and efficiently react to, respond to and resolve crime across a much wider area. This improves the management of the city’s most critical issues related to crime and makes citizens feel safer, improving the overall reputation of the city and attracting investment, which leads to economic development.

Partnerships between public organisations, private companies and the community can bring benefits to the whole system – in addition to law enforcement and the associated public safety. It can also be used in other areas such as traffic management, environmental management and even warnings about potential natural disasters.

For more information contact Axis Communications, +27 11 548 6780, [email protected], www.axis.com



Credit(s)




Share this article:
Share via emailShare via LinkedInPrint this page



Further reading:

Vumacam highlights concerns with proposed Johannesburg CCTV by-laws
Vumacam News & Events Surveillance
Vumacam has raised objections to critical provisions of the by-laws governing privately owned CCTV cameras with a view of public spaces in the city, which were promulgated on Friday, 28 February 2025.

Read more...
Milestone announces a platform to enable access to data and train AI models
Surveillance AI & Data Analytics
Milestone Systems has announced Project Hafnia to build services and democratise AI-model training with high-quality, compliant video data leveraging NVIDIA Cosmos Curator and AI model, fine-tuning microservices.

Read more...
Benchmark in long-range surveillance
Duxbury Networking Surveillance Products & Solutions
Duxbury Networking says the long-range, high-resolution monitoring AXIS Q1809-LE bullet camera has been enhanced further with integration into Milestone XProtect to set a new standard for forensic-level image clarity, intelligent event detection, and enhanced security management.

Read more...
Security industry embraces mobile credentials, biometrics and AI
AI & Data Analytics Access Control & Identity Management Integrated Solutions
As organisations navigate an increasingly complex threat landscape, security leaders are making strategic shifts toward unified platforms and emerging technologies, according to the newly released 2025 State of Security and Identity Report from HID.

Read more...
AI for retail risk management
Surveillance Retail (Industry) AI & Data Analytics
As businesses face mounting challenges in a volatile economic environment, Ares-i remains an essential tool for proactively identifying, assessing, and mitigating risks that threaten operational stability and customer satisfaction.

Read more...
The need for integrated control room displays
Leaderware Editor's Choice Surveillance Training & Education
Display walls provide a coordinated perspective that facilitates the ongoing feel for situations, assists in the coordination of resources to deal with the situation, and facilitates follow up by response personnel.

Read more...
Six key security technology trends in 2025
Axis Communications SA Surveillance
Axis Communications examines some new trends for the security sector in 2025, as well as some new, old trends that are once again highlighted because of their benefit to the end user in the race to obtain optimal value from technology installations.

Read more...
edgE:Tower video analytics integrated with SEON
Surveillance Integrated Solutions AI & Data Analytics
Sentronics has announced a new integration between its edgE:Tower advanced AI-driven video analytics solution and SEON, a Central Monitoring Software (CMS) platform. This integration enhances real-time situational awareness and automated threat detection for control rooms.

Read more...
The impact of video analytics on business security
AI & Data Analytics Surveillance
As more enterprises work to integrate AI-enabled solutions into their networks, enterprises must not lose sight of the implications of these integrations and the added value they are working to unlock.

Read more...
The need for integrated control room displays
Editor's Choice Surveillance Training & Education
Display walls provide a coordinated perspective that facilitates the ongoing feel for situations, assists in the coordination of resources to deal with the situation, and facilitates follow up by response personnel.

Read more...