UnHerd with Freddie Sayers

Matthew Crawford: The truth about 'Smart Cities'

23 snips
Nov 19, 2025
Matthew B. Crawford, a writer and philosopher known for his works on urban life and technology, dives into the risks of 'smart cities.' He questions the trade-offs of data-driven urban design and the loss of spontaneity, highlighting how corporate control undermines democratic rights. They explore the impact of remote-controlled vehicles on ownership and the pitfalls of prioritizing safety over human experience. Crawford emphasizes the need for bottom-up urban wisdom, contrasting it with elite-driven planning, while reflecting on life in Winnipeg as a serene alternative.
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ANECDOTE

Google’s Toronto Plan Rejected

  • Crawford recounts Google's planned Toronto smart-city project and its rejection by citizens over data concerns.
  • He compares grand projects to Potemkin villages and notes planners pick places with little resistance, like Brasilia or Chandigarh.
INSIGHT

Legibility Enables Control

  • Rendering the city maximally legible to data replicates historical state impulses for oversight and control.
  • Crawford links this synoptic view to James C. Scott's Seeing Like a State and to the appeal of social engineering.
INSIGHT

Ownership Is Becoming Subscription

  • Ownership and sovereignty erode as vehicles and services become subscription-based and remotely controlled.
  • Crawford highlights cars whose higher performance features are remotely enabled only by subscription as an example.
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