Manufactured Cities: A Case Study of the First Smart City in Brazil

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In 2017, ArchDaily Brazil reported that Smart City Laguna would become the first “smart city” in Brazil. With its inauguration scheduled for that same year, the venture opened with 1,800 units in its first phase, and in its final phase, 7,065 units divided between residential, commercial and technological uses.

Located in the Croatá district of São Gonçalo do Amarante, the first Brazilian smart city occupies 815 acres directly connected to the federal highway BR-22, which crosses the states of Ceará, Piauí, and Maranhão, starting in Fortaleza towards Marabá, in Pará. Its location has economic reasons: the proximity to Pecém Harbor, in Fortaleza, the Pecém Steel Company (CSP) and the Transnordestina Railroad make Croatá a strategic hub that has been recently occupied by technological companies, becoming a “digital belt” a little over 50 kilometers from the state’s capital.

The self-proclaimed first social-smart city in the world is a development by the Italian group Planet. It offers plots for all income brackets, including units for the Minha Casa Minha Vida program (a social housing program in Brazil for low-income families). Also, the project is within the same framework of other smart cities around the world. It is based on technological, sustainable and mobility principles.

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Cite: Baratto, Romullo. "Manufactured Cities: A Case Study of the First Smart City in Brazil " [Cidades fabricadas: o caso da primeira smart city do Brasil] 13 Jan 2019. ArchDaily. (Trans. Cavallaro, Fernanda) Accessed . <https://www.archdaily.com/909330/manufactured-cities-a-case-study-of-the-first-smart-city-in-brazil> ISSN 0719-8884

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