Part 2: How Can Low-Cost, Open-Source, Easy-To-Use Air Quality Sensors Be Used to Support Sustainable Urban Development?
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Low-cost and easy-to-use measuring devices for air quality determinants and noise, such us the one produced by open-seneca, have become available. Understanding the limitations of these type of devices in comparison to high-end exemplars regarding data accuracy and coverage, they could become a powerful way of collecting data and involving the local population while doing it.
The Urban Pathways Project is involved in several sustainable urban mobility projects in developing countries, which have a great potential in terms of improving air quality and reducing noise in urban areas. Measuring the specific effects of the demonstration activities on these variables will be invaluable in quantifying the impact of the projects’ activities and thus the potential impact that replication and scaling-up of those measures could have at the local and national level, and ultimately at the global scale.
In our first webinar: How to assemble low-cost, open-source and easy-to-use Air Quality Sensors, open-seneca, a UK-based organisation, whose goal is to transfer knowledge on how to build open-source sensor hardware to raise awareness and initiate a behavioural change among local communities, provided an online training to previously identified local makerspaces, universities or research centres in UP cities that have the skills and interest to build AQ measuring devices and that would be willing to replicate the workshops on site. If you missed Part 1, please find all the information here.
In the second part of the webinar series, the objective is to showcase the possible uses of this type of AQ sensors based on the experiences of projects carried out in different cities.
Agenda
The collection of data via mobile AQ sensors in Buenos Aires
Matías Acosta
UNDP Argentina
The use of AQ sensors to measure the impact of short-term urban interventions
Juan Manuel Guzmán
Ciudad Emergente, Santiago de Chile
The Citizen Science AQ Programme of Medellín (tbc)
Gabriel Velázquez
Medellín’s Early Warning System
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