For CITIES

From efficiency to resilience: reimagining urban tech for high-stakes environments

Aerial view of a complex urban highway interchange at night, illustrating the interconnected infrastructure and resilience required for modern smart cities operating in high-stakes environments.
Modern cities must evolve beyond efficiency and embrace resilience-first approaches to ensure continuity, trust, and security in an increasingly uncertain world.

Sara Miller

Marketing Editor

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Global turbulence is fundamentally changing the DNA of the modern city. Urban spaces once focused on convenience and efficiency, but today they are forced to evolve towards a resilience-first model.

The concept of the “smart city” is moving beyond service comfort. It is now a strategic foundation for protecting citizens, ensuring continuity of governance, and preserving the most valuable asset: public trust.

Smart city during disruption

  • According to the UN, the majority of the world’s population lives in cities, and this figure is projected to reach 68% by 2050. This concentration makes cities both centres of economic growth and points of vulnerability due to population density, critical infrastructure, and logistics hubs.
  • Modern cities are increasingly dependent on digital services, and these services are becoming primary targets for cyberattacks in hybrid conflicts. Attacks are aimed not only at data theft, but also at physical disruption: shutting down power substations, water supply systems, transport networks, and more.

Why resilience matters

Traditionally, investors have assessed smart city projects through the lens of ROI, efficiency, and cost optimisation. But global trends in recent years, from COVID-19 to geopolitical instability, are changing this logic. Resilience has stopped being an abstract concept and has become a fundamental requirement.

Urban infrastructure without built-in resilience is a weak asset in a world of growing risks.

By contrast, solutions designed with crisis scenarios in mind demonstrate greater long-term stability and predictability.


What this means in practice

Communication

This includes alert systems, dashboards, and convenient city applications where people can see not only news, but also specific actions taken by the authorities and have the opportunity to provide feedback. Two-way digital channels reduce chaos, accelerate response, and give residents a sense of participation rather than isolation.

Trust

Trust emerges where digital services work predictably and consistently, where all decisions are backed by data, where the progress and current status of projects are clear and transparent, and where authorities actively respond to community requests.

Cybersecurity 

This means network segmentation, continuous monitoring, team training, and recovery protocols. The question is no longer whether an attack will happen, but how quickly a city can contain the incident, restore services, and communicate honestly.

Ethical use of data

Data collection and analysis must have a clear purpose and clear boundaries: residents should understand what data the city collects, why it is collected, how long it is stored, and who has access to it. It is especially important that security tools do not turn into tools of uncontrolled surveillance and do not undermine the trust that a smart city is meant to strengthen.

The resilience-first city with MISTO

A city designed according to the resilience-first principle must operate as an integrated system in which situational awareness, analytics, communication, and security are interconnected and reinforce one another. This is the logic behind MISTO’s City-as-a-Service platform.

It combines a city application, a situation centre, and analytical modules into a single ecosystem. This makes it possible to work with alerts, resident requests, transport, environmental indicators, and other city data in a coordinated environment rather than in fragmented systems.

MISTO provides real-time visibility into urban processes through dashboards that support management decisions in conditions of uncertainty and limited time. The platform architecture is built around the principles of data minimisation, multi-level access control, and built-in cybersecurity.

When digital tools strengthen governance, the city is able to understand the situation faster, coordinate the actions of services, maintain transparency in its interaction with the community, and gradually build resilience as part of everyday life.


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