Capital City Pilots unveils first wave of challenges
By
Nathan Fung
Three challenges related to people-tracking, land recovery, and downtown revitalization are now available for Edmonton entrepreneurs to pitch solutions to under the Capital City Pilots program.
"The city will benefit from new and innovative ideas, and participants will gain valuable experience and the chance to validate their solutions," Mayor Amarjeet Sohi said at a July 12 announcement at Edmonton Unlimited. "Once these ideas are tested, they have the potential to expand into global markets."
The program, which was announced last year, aims to connect local innovators with the City of Edmonton to find solutions to urban problems. The first three challenges the program is getting innovators to tackle are:
- Data-Driven Downtown: Visualizing real-time population density in the core, including residents, workers, and tourists;
- Environmental Records for Contaminated Sites: Surfacing and organizing land-use information to identify contaminated sites such as former dry cleaners that could be cleaned up and redeveloped;
- Igniting Vibrancy in The Quarters: Imagining ways to use surface-level parking lots, parks, and existing infrastructure to enhance community well-being and foster economic growth in The Quarters.
"We wanted there to be a number of startups in our city that were well-positioned to put their hat in the ring," Edmonton Unlimited CEO Catherine Warren said of the topics chosen for the first challenges.
While Capital City Pilots is not a procurement program, it aims to give younger startups a chance to work with a large urban municipality, said program head Abbie Stein-MacLean.
"You don't really get to experience what it's like working with a customer the size of the city if you're just starting out," she said. "So it really allows innovators and entrepreneurs to help work through any potential pitfalls."