NEW YORK - Wednesday, October 2nd 2013 [ME NewsWire]
(BUSINESS
WIRE) The Financial Times and Citi today announce the finalists for the
second annual FT/Citi Ingenuity Awards: Urban Ideas in Action
programme. The awards aim to recognise individuals, teams, organisations
and community groups that have developed groundbreaking solutions to
urban challenges that benefit cities, citizens and urban communities.
Submissions
were received from 44 countries and judges selected the finalists by
region, based on the most innovative solutions enabling urban progress
across city administration, transport systems, energy and utilities,
education and resource management, housing, health, social services,
mobile technologies, community engagement and collaboration platforms.
One
winner will be chosen for each region and a global winner will be
announced at an awards dinner in New York on December 10, where Edward
Glaeser, Fred and Eleanor Glimp Professor of Economics at Harvard
University, will deliver the keynote address.
2013 FT/City Ingenuity Award finalists:
AFRICA
& MIDDLE EAST Bicycling Empowerment Network, Namibia LEAP Africa,
Nigeria Sanergy, Nairobi Shack/Slum Dwellers International Alliance,
Cape Town
ASIA-PACIFIC aProCh, Ahmedabad CMC, Bangalore Digicel PNG Foundation, Papua New Guinea Parinaam Foundation, Bangalore
EUROPE 3Space, London BIG - Bjarke Ingels Group, Copenhagen BlaBlaCar, Paris Trees for Cities, London
LATIN AMERICA Aprenda, Peru Belo Horizonte City Council, Brazil Fundación Calicanto, Panama City IBM, Rio de Janeiro
NORTH
AMERICA & CARIBBEAN Baltimore Housing, Baltimore, Maryland The
Competitiveness Company, Jamaica National Portrait Gallery, Washington
DC SeeClickFix, New Haven, Connecticut
"This year's entries
included inspiring and effective solutions to key issues plaguing local
communities,” said Michael Skapinker, assistant editor and editor of
special reports for the Financial Times. “All of the impressive work
submitted by the finalists has great implications for innovative
solutions to urban challenges around the globe.”
“The demands on
individual cities to prepare for growth and to be competitive in the
global economy are tremendous. We are proud to recognize those striving
to develop innovative urban solutions that enable progress for their
communities and ultimately society as a whole,” said Ed Skyler,
Executive Vice President of Global Public Affairs, Citi. “These
finalists inspire us as we work to provide the world’s top 150 urban
centers with the financial support they need to modernize, support
economic development and create jobs.”
The 2013 judging panel includes:
Professor Abhijit Banerjee, Economist
John Bowis, OBE, Honorary President, Health First Europe
Sir Terry Farrell, CBE, International Architect & Design Champion and Director, Terry Farrell and Partners
Edwin Heathcote, Architecture and Design Critic, Financial Times (co-chair)
Bruno Lanvin, Executive Director, European Competitiveness Initiative, INSEAD (co-chair)
Janice Muthui, Foundation Manager, Community Cooker Foundation, 2012 FT/Citi Ingenuity Awards global winner
Professor Carlo Ratti, Italian Architect and Engineer
Professor Anne-Marie Slaughter, President, New America Foundation
Luanne Zurlo, Founder and President, Worldfund
For more details on the FT/Citi Ingenuity Awards, please visit www.ft.com/ingenuity or follow the conversation at #FTCitiAwards.
-ends-
THE FINALISTS FOR THE 2013 FT/CITI INGENUITY AWARD
AFRICA & MIDDLE EAST
Bicycling Empowerment Network
The
Bicycle Empowerment Network, initiated in response to demand for
affordable bicycles and maintenance services, has created small business
opportunities in urban areas of Namibia, while also helping to finance
community services.
Each Enterprise Box set up by the Network is
run by entrepreneurs newly trained in technical and business skills who
sell refurbished bicycles, spare parts and repair services. Revenue is
used for working capital as well as development of new business
opportunities, ranging from solar energy products and electric grain
milling to office services, computer training and internet access.
A
network of 30 Enterprise Boxes has created over 100 full-time jobs, and
in 2012 distributed nearly 6,000 affordable bicycles to disadvantaged
communities. Profits from two projects in Windhoek support employment
training for women and a centre that runs a kindergarten and
after-school program.
LEAP Africa
The Leadership, Ethics
and Civics program, launched by Leap Africa in 2008, equips public
secondary school students in Nigeria with the life and leadership skills
they require to serve as agents of social change, implementing a range
of projects focused on improving lives in their local communities.
To
achieve its aim, LEAP trains secondary school teachers through a Train
the Trainers Program that enables them to deliver the curriculum to
Senior Secondary Class 1 students over a one-year period.
With
the support of the International Youth Foundation and Nokia and in
collaboration with the Ministry of Education, the program has reached
over 14,000 students in five states. By the end of the 2011-2012 school
year, students had implemented 499 social change projects, ranging from
improved street lighting to medical testing, positively affecting over
60,000 people.
Sanergy
Sanergy provides sustainable,
hygienic sanitation in Nairobi’s slums through an innovative toilet
franchise system that generates additional income by recycling human
waste to create electricity as well as organic fertiliser for farmers.
The
initiative involves establishing networks of small-scale high-quality
water-free toilets, manufactured using local materials and operated in
the slums on a pay-per-use basis by resident micro-entrepreneurs.
Waste
is safely collected into sealed 30-liter airtight containers and
transported every day to a central processing facility. Sanergy converts
the waste into safe and reusable by-products, including organic
fertiliser sold to farms and electricity sold to the grid. The program
creates jobs and business opportunities, while tackling serious
environmental, social, and economic challenges.
Shack/Slum Dwellers International Alliance (Cape Town)
The
Shack/Slum Dwellers International Alliance has established a programme
that enables impoverished communities in Cape Town and Johannesburg to
proactively upgrade their informal shack or slum housing and reconfigure
the layout of their settlements.
The project aims to facilitate
access to roads, provision of water, sanitation, waste removal and
electricity, while encouraging the creation of public open spaces
through utilisation of previously unexploited areas. The social cohesion
and unity that is needed to implement such transformations builds and
strengthens communities and creates a platform and voice for the urban
poor.
ASIA-PACIFIC
aProCh
aProCh -- A Protagonist
in Every Child -- is an initiative started by Ahmedabad’s Riverside
School to create India's first child-friendly city.
aProCh
organises special activities for children that take advantage of
Ahmedabad’s parks and other areas of the city not initially designed for
the 'nurturing of' childhood, and provide experiences where safety,
curiosity, exploration and community become part of a child's everyday
life.
aProCh also works with municipal authorities to enhance the physical environment for children.
Over
the past six years, the project has gathered the support of the
municipality, parents, children, private enterprises and concerned
individuals, and has become a city-wide initiative with collaborative
efforts from all stakeholders.
CMC
Bangalore-based CMC, in
cooperation with the Karnataka State Road Transport Corporation, has
created India’s first Intelligent Transport System, initially focused on
a fleet of 500 buses in the city of Mysore, with the aim of extending
to 4,000 buses across the State in its second phase.
The
objective of the project, funded by the World Bank, is to overcome
strategic transport challenges such as congestion, poor infrastructure,
affordability constraints, increasing emissions and the service needs of
a growing customer base.
It addresses this through real-time
dissemination of information on bus arrival times -- obtained via
satellite-based GPS and displayed on large LED screens at bus stops and
by SMS messages.
Digicel PNG Foundation
The Digicel Papua
New Guinea Foundation has established a programme in partnership with
the Ginigoada Business Development Foundation that aims to improve
living standards in deprived communities by training residents in a
range of skills from personal health to financial awareness.
The
Life and Business Skills Program is comprised of a two-week syllabus --
the first week involves workshops aimed at increasing awareness about
gender equality, family violence, sexual health and hygiene issues,
while the second week offers interactive business training focused on
family finance, income generation activities and building overall
confidence.
Upon completion, participants are given a Basic
Business Skills Certificate. The program has been conducted in more than
20 settlements and more than 3,000 participants have received
certificates.
Parinaam Foundation
The Urban Ultra Poor
Programme, initiated by the Parinaam Foundation, aims to economically
and socially empower women who live in extreme poverty in the slums of
Bangalore.
The programme covers four critical components
delivered over a period of 12 months to enable participants to establish
a more stable lifestyle -- Livelihood Development, Healthcare Support,
Childcare and Education, and Financial Literacy and Social Services
Support.
The aim is that upon completion, participants should be
able to earn a stable income, have a form of identification, provide
their children with education, access good health care and manage
finances.
EUROPE
3Space
3Space is a London-based
charity that works with landlords and leaseholders to unlock the value
of empty commercial properties -- making them available for a limited
period to other non-profit organisations free of charge for start-up
projects benefiting the community.
3Space has managed the
short-term use of property in 45 buildings across the UK since 2010,
giving space to 140 charities, community groups and social enterprises.
Landlords benefit from reduced insurance, maintenance, business rates
and security costs and can take their properties back at short notice.
3Space
provides a scalable approach to the management of vacant commercial
space, reducing waste while delivering tangible social and economic
benefits and driving urban renewal.
BIG - Bjarke Ingels Group
Superkilen,
lead-designed by Danish architects BIG, is a modern park -- with trails
for pedestrians and cyclists, and outdoor recreation areas -- in one of
the poorest and most ethnically diverse districts in Copenhagen.
The
conceptual starting point is the park’s division into three zones and
colors – the red square, the black market and the green park. To
celebrate the area’s multi-cultural heritage, BIG has worked with the
local community to source street furniture, play equipment, sculpture
and lighting from the 62 countries that were originally home to the
district’s residents.
The project has helped rejuvenate the area by uniting residents into one global neighbourhood.
BlaBlaCar
BlaBlaCar,
based in Paris, allows drivers with empty seats in their vehicles to
connect with passengers and share intercity journeys. Drivers utilise
the website and mobile app to publish a planned journey. Passengers can
then search available offers, and contact the driver of their choice.
BlaBlaCar
provides a range of features to create a secure, reliable, trust-based
community and easy connections between drivers and passengers. Members
rate one another after travelling together, allowing them to build
reputations in the community.
By enabling over 600,000 people a
month in ten countries across Europe to share intercity journeys,
BlaBlaCar is increasing the efficiency of road transport, and reducing
its environmental impact.
Trees for Cities
Edible
Playgrounds, a program organised by London-based charity Trees for
Cities, engages children in inner-city schools in gardening activities
centered on the positive aspects of fresh food. Growing fruit and
vegetables in school yards and playgrounds not only introduces
underprivileged children to the delights of nature but raises their
awareness and understanding of the link between nature and what
constitutes a healthy diet.
Edible Playgrounds also facilitates
and empowers local communities to transform their outdoor spaces by
delivering green-skills workshops and training sessions to school
children, youth groups and adults.
Edible Playgrounds offers a
potential long-term solution to food poverty in the UK while also
educating people to lead a healthy lifestyle from a young age.
LATIN AMERICA
Aprenda
Aprenda,
a unit of Peruvian micro-lender Grupo ACP, has developed an educational
program for low-income women in urban areas who have the ideas and
aspiration to run their own small businesses, but lack the financial
skills and formal education to achieve their dreams and contribute
positively to their family and community.
The course is built
around a specially produced soap opera – “El Gran Salto” or The Big Leap
– that tells the story of an entrepreneur called Vicky who starts her
own business. A typical course runs for two to three hours, during which
students watch episodes of the soap opera while being coached on
business management and personal development.
The program is on track to meet its initial target to improve the business capability of 100,000 women in three years.
Belo Horizonte City Council
The
City Council of Belo Horizonte in Brazil is spearheading the first
public private partnership in the country’s education sector in
collaboration with IFC and the Brazilian Development Bank. Under a
concession awarded last year, a private contractor will build 37 state
nursery and primary schools by 2014 -- creating places for 20,000
students, particularly in low-income communities.
The concession
includes operation and maintenance of the schools for the next 20 years,
which puts the onus on the building company to ensure that
high-quality, durable materials are used.
This and other
efficiencies not normally generated by public sector operators means
that schools can concentrate on teaching their students, thus boosting
the quality of education in the city.
Fundación Calicanto
Fundación
Calicanto, a non-profit organization dedicated to restoring the
historic and human heritage of Panama City’s Casco Antiguo (or old
town), has created CAPTA, a program that provides the area’s many
unemployed and underprivileged women with vocational training for
entry-level jobs in the hotel and tourism industry, as well as
entrepreneurial skills training for self-employment.
A five-week
course in personal and psychological development is followed by a
two-week hotel internship, assistance with resume preparation, and job
placement. The goal is not only to help women find jobs, but also to
give them the inspiration and self-esteem they need to bring their
families out of poverty.
Launched in 2006, CAPTA trains 120 women
per year, with over 80 percent of graduates securing permanent
employment, even in businesses outside the Casco Antiguo.
IBM
IBM,
in cooperation with the City of Rio de Janeiro, has created a data
management center that integrates information from multiple government
departments and 30 different city agencies to improve safety and
responsiveness to various types of emergency incidents, such as flash
floods and landslides.
The Rio Operations Center applies analytic
models developed by IBM to predict emergency incidents and help
officials manage traffic movement, public transportation, and the
efficiency of power and water supplies. The center, for example, can
predict heavy rains up to 48 hours in advance.
Since the center
was set up in 2010, after a torrential storm caused landslides and flash
floods, the new alert system has improved emergency response times by
30 percent.
NORTH AMERICA & CARIBBEAN
Baltimore Housing
Vacants
to Value is an initiative by the Mayor of Baltimore and the Baltimore
Housing Authority to eliminate vacant properties quickly, efficiently
and economically through a combination of demolition and rehabilitation.
In
neighborhoods with just a few scattered vacant properties, $900
administrative citations are used to incentivize owners to fix their
properties or sell them quickly. In severely distressed neighborhoods,
the City pursues targeted demolition and greening, so that underutilized
properties can be transformed into community assets.
Since the
program began at the end of 2010, 1,302 vacant houses have been
rehabilitated and 660 more have been demolished. The City plans to tear
down 1,500 more vacant properties and renovate another 1,500 by 2016.
The Competitiveness Company
The
Competitiveness Company, an NGO focused on improving the lives of
underprivileged urban youth, has developed an ornamental fish farming
and export project that is offering young people in Jamaica’s most
violent inner-city slums a chance to escape poverty and gang life.
The
initiative, which takes advantage of growing global demand for
ornamental aquarium fish, involves technical training in aquaculture and
the introduction of small scale production technology that allows
budding entrepreneurs to efficiently grow thousands of fish in small
backyard spaces at very low cost.
More than 130 young people are
now grouped into urban farm clusters, sharing information and resources
to achieve lower production costs and grow better quality fish which are
then sold to local exporters and marketed internationally.
National Portrait Gallery
The
National Portrait Gallery in Washington DC developed a program that
targeted underserved urban teenagers -- often accused of disturbing the
peace by local residents, including on the Gallery’s own steps – and
empowered them with skills for the creative economy.
Local
teenagers serve as a firm of "creative consultants," spending months
conceiving, planning, marketing, staffing, managing and evaluating a
“Project Runway” type fashion show at the Gallery. The program was
created in partnership with ARTLAB Plus, a teen space in the Hirshhorn
Museum and Sculpture Garden.
The show, held in the summer of
2011, galvanized the partner organizations to begin planning for a
long-term, sustainable network to support Washington DC teens’ learning
objectives, career development and life goals.
SeeClickFix
SeeClickFix
-- launched in New Haven, Connecticut four years ago and now used in
more than 130 cities across the US -- is a website and mobile app that
empowers citizens to address everyday problems in their neighborhood by
publicly documenting and routing them to their local government.
At
the same time, it facilitates a more efficient and transparent response
from governments to these requests through a customized dashboard.
In
addition to hundreds of thousands of issues that have been resolved by
local governments through the program, SeeClickFix has led to citizens
solving problems on their streets they would previously have left to the
city.
SeeClickFix enables municipalities and citizens to
interact in a collaborative and transparent way that builds trust and
enhances civic spirit, while pragmatically improving their communities.
About the Financial Times:
The
Financial Times, one of the world’s leading business news
organisations, is recognised internationally for its authority,
integrity and accuracy. Providing essential news, comment, data and
analysis for the global business community, the FT has a combined paid
print and digital circulation of more than 600,000 (Deloitte assured, Q2
2013). Mobile is an increasingly important channel for the FT, driving
more than a third of FT.com traffic and a quarter of digital
subscriptions. FT education products now serve 25 of the world’s top 50
business schools.
About Citi:
Citi, the leading global
bank, has approximately 200 million customer accounts and does business
in more than 160 countries and jurisdictions. Citi provides consumers,
corporations, governments and institutions with a broad range of
financial products and services, including consumer banking and credit,
corporate and investment banking, securities brokerage, transaction
services, and wealth management.
Additional information may be
found at www.citigroup.com | Twitter: @Citi | YouTube:
www.youtube.com/citi | Blog: http://blog.citigroup.com | Facebook:
www.facebook.com/citi | LinkedIn: www.linkedin.com/company/citi
About Citi for Cities:
Citi
for Cities is an initiative that harnesses the best of Citi across the
globe to enable cities to become more efficient, by providing financing
that facilitates commerce and modernization, and by empowering citizens
to access services that enhance liveability and prosperity. Citi aims to
help cities achieve their ambitions across the key ecosystems that
power a city including administration, roads and transit, ports of
entry, energy and utilities, workplace and education, health and safety
and regeneration and development. Citi’s span of engagement with cities
includes public and private sectors, the financial sector and citizens
and the communities in which they live. For more information, please
visit www.citiforcities.com.
About the FT/Citi Ingenuity Awards:
More
than half the world’s population lives in cities today, a number that
is expected to rise in the decades ahead. As a result, cities have a
pressing need to address the challenges of urbanisation and find
solutions that modernise infrastructure, improve efficiency and enhance
quality of life and foster sustainable growth and development.
The
FT/Citi Ingenuity Awards: Urban Ideas in Action, a global programme
sponsored by Citi, was developed to recognise leaders, teams,
organisations and community groups who have developed innovative
solutions to urban challenges that benefit cities, citizens and urban
communities.
Top candidates will be profiled in two FT global
magazine supplements and invited to participate in events to further
dialogue on urban challenges and solutions. Finalists will be selected
by region. One winner will be chosen for each region. A global winner
will be announced at an awards dinner in New York in December 2013.
Submissions
will be reviewed based on a range of criteria, including originality,
impact, efficiency and outcome. Criteria were developed by INSEAD, one
of the world's leading and largest graduate business schools. All
entries will be reviewed by the FT and INSEAD for qualification. A panel
of global subject matter experts will select winners. As sponsor, Citi
will not review or judge submissions. Eligibility criteria and
additional program details are available at www.FTCitiawards.com. Follow
the conversation at #FTCitiAwards.
Contacts
For further information:
Financial Times
Ryann Gastwirth, + 1-917-551-5094
ryann.gastwirth@ft.com
Citi
Liz Fogarty, +1-212-559-0486
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