What is a digital twin?

What is a digital twin?

My list

The use of digital twins in smart cities is growing in popularity. These virtual replicas or virtual realities are extremely useful for anticipating problems that may arise. Also for experimenting in a controlled and risk-free manner, or helping in the planning and development of cities. But what is a digital twin?

What does ‘digital twin’ actually mean?

A digital twin is a digitized copy of a smart city, a completely virtual scale model. It was first used in the construction of buildings and other infrastructures with BIM programs, which enable all the components of a building to be monitored.

The aim of this system was to anticipate any potential faults in the material. It soon extended to other services: sewage system, energy, roads, education, etc. The digital twin is like a SimCity (the video game) with a virtual city identical to the physical city.

How much does a digital twin cost?

It depends on the desired complexity. The truth is the cost of a digital twin may be secondary taking into account all that it can offer. As it is digitized, the cost stems from its constant updates to keep the system up to date. If a project is undertaken, a building is demolished or a tree is planted, this must be reflected.

These expenses are paid by the respective construction companies, mobility agents or the different local governments, among others. Very often there are municipal regulations that require this form of digital documentation to be submitted for each procedure. The financial return is guaranteed thanks to the use of digital twins as urban planning systems.

How to use digital twins to build the cities of tomorrow

PIC 1

An example of the use of digital twin technology is using them to understand which regions of a city will have a greater population growth, with the ultimate aim of creating new facilities such as health centers, schools, parks, etc. All of this requires mathematical models that complement the virtual model. It is not just a visual representation.

Another common use is urban mobility planning: Where should new streets be created? Which should be pedestrianized? Where should speeds be reduced? Which buildings need moving? Where are there more urban conflicts or which are the busiest areas?

But it can also be applied to participatory governance with citizen initiatives that shape the respective neighborhoods, to tenders by developers that show what a reformed building would look like, and even simulations of rising sea levels due to global warming.

Digital twins: how to improve city life

There is a city-state that has been using digital twins for its smart city since 2018. That city is Singapore and its ‘Virtual Singapore’ model. This digital city has been helping people with reduced mobility for some time now. The city council uses simulation to eliminate architectural barriers.

Other ways of improving city life is to simulate what would happen if solar panels were installed or a pneumatic waste collection system. Twins are particularly useful for conducting trials without affecting citizens. They are only implemented when they are confirmed to be suitable.

Digital twins for smart cities are the future of the virtual representation of cities to model them. They are the perfect environment for planning changes or anticipating problems that may arise in the city and thus improve the life of citizens.

Images | Tobias, iStock/Sasin Paraksa

Related content

Recommended profiles for you

CC
Camilo Andrés Cruz
Secretaria de educación del distrito
Profesional
GB
GISELLE BRAND
PREFEITURA DE NITERÓI / SEPLAG
\\n\\nSUBSECRETARIA - SEPLAG / /PREFEITURA DE NITEROI \\nPREFEITURA DE NITEROI -SEPLAG
EF
Eduardo Firstman
MASBIO
Director/MASBIO
MM
Mark McCann
Belfast City Council
Innovation Programme Lead
EI
Eduardo Abel Ibarra
Municipio de Tolhuin
Secretario de Producción, Innovación e Inversiones
AP
Ana PASTOR
URV
PHD student
EC
Evangelina Chiaraviglio
ACICE
WS
Wesley Sá Teles Guerra
IGADI
Paradiolomacy advisor
SM
Sefikaaa Matii
Bonny
Admin
DD
Devy May Lina Devy
Bandung Institute of Technology
Senior Analyst
EO
Estrella Ojeda
Vida Pública Consultoría en Comunicación
Director
OS
Ovidiu Slimac
ROVEST Cluster
Secretary General
LH
Leon Heese
KölnBusiness Wirtschaftsförderungs-GmbH
Projectmanager
TD
Tiago da Cruz
Barcelona en Común
Activist
MG
Maurici Garcia
T-Systems
Program Manager for the Smart City project GIJON_IN
NB
Nuno Batista da Silva
CMS
Advisor
EM
Edwin Munoz Aristizabal
Esu
Manager
RS
Rosa Surinach
UN-Habitat
Coordinator, Advocacy, Outreach and Partnerships
MM
Marina Misse
Municipalidad de Villa Carlos Paz
Directora de Modernización y Gestión de Calidad
AC
Alejandra Casanova Priego
Universidad Olmeca
Profesor