VUB Press · Urban Intelligence
Mindful
Smart
Cities
Rethinking Smart Cities with Mindfulness Engineering™ — a new framework bridging technology, nature, and human consciousness.
I see Shima in many ways as maybe operating in the same tradition as Jane Jacobs, arguing for a more human face to cities.
Professor David Sloan Wilson
Evolutionary Biologist · Binghamton University
Three Dimensions
Where Nature,
Mind &
Technology
Converge
At the heart of every Mindful Smart City lies a triad of intelligences. Not technology alone — but the living convergence of ecological awareness, human consciousness, and purposeful design. These are the three irreducible dimensions of a city that truly thinks.
First Dimension
Nature
Ecological intelligence embedded in urban design — cities that breathe, regenerate, and harmonise with living systems. Nature is not a backdrop to the city; it is its foundation.
Second Dimension
Mind
Human consciousness and collective intelligence at the heart of civic systems. Mindful citizens shape mindful infrastructures — awareness precedes architecture.
Third Dimension
Technology
Digital networks and smart infrastructure designed with awareness — tools that serve human flourishing, not the reverse. Technology follows consciousness, never leads it.
Technology only connects cities on a mechanical level. Therefore, in order to have a truly connected global urban community, we must cultivate deep human connection. Authentic human connection elevates collective consciousness, heals generational traumas, and helps paradigm shifts.
— Shima Beigi, Mindful Smart Cities
Foreword
Mindful Smart Cities
by Dr Shima Beigi
Foreword written by
Dr Harry Halpin
Research Scientist, Inria
CEO & Founder, NYM Technologies SA
Paris, France
"There is a moment of reckoning for smart cities fast approaching, and Shima Beigi's Mindful Smart City Manifesto points us to a way out."
In a moving foreword, Dr Harry Halpin (Inria, Paris) explores the 'moment of reckoning' for our urban spaces. He identifies Mindful Smart Cities as a daring synthesis of Eastern philosophy and Western science — a roadmap to reclaim the public agora from the 'opaque surveillance machine' of modern IoT.
Shima Beigi, PhD
Adapted from
Mindful Smart Cities
VUB Press
Smart cities first appeared in academic literature during the 1990s — conceived as a laboratory for integrating multimedia technologies into public space.
Early discussions, such as those by Van Bastelaer in 1998, emerged in response to widening gaps between public and private sectors, increasing distance between governments and citizens, and the accelerating pressures of globalisation. The digital city was introduced as an online community — an alternative spatial dimension intended to repair the disrupted relationship between citizens and governments. The assumption was simple: if communication was the problem, then technical and managerial solutions could resolve it.
However, this logic reduced complex social and political fractures to operational inefficiencies. Over time, deeper issues such as loss of community, erosion of belonging, and weakened civic identity received less attention. The literature increasingly shifted toward mechanical formulations of how urban systems could become digitally smart.
Two decades later, the field still lacks a universal framework or shared ideology. Scholars such as Anthopoulos and Fitsilis have highlighted the conceptual confusion surrounding smart cities. Scientific communities, political actors, and industry leaders continue to produce fragmented and often disconnected interpretations of what smartness means. Without a common platform or shared vision, smart cities remain an aggregation of isolated technological ambitions.
"Technology can interconnect social and technical systems. It cannot automatically resolve issues of spatial justice, autonomy, or democratic legitimacy."
As information and communication technologies became embedded in urban systems, new concerns emerged. Sustainable development, social cohesion, sense of place, citizens' rights, resilience, and adaptation to future shocks must be integral to any meaningful urban transformation. Yet these elements often remain peripheral to technology-driven agendas.
The process of smartification increasingly involves the integration of artificial intelligence into urban infrastructure. Sensors and AI systems replicate aspects of human cognitive capabilities such as learning and decision-making. As cities move rapidly in this direction, critical questions arise regarding governmentality, the political dimensions of data, and the distribution of power within digital ecosystems.
My own analysis of major smart city definitions reveals a common pattern. Most definitions focus on the label of smartness while converging around one central element: the linking of ICT infrastructure to cities. Some approaches are influenced by market-driven perspectives. Others frame technology as a means toward higher goals such as wellbeing or sustainability.
Yet treating technology merely as a means to an end does not solve deeply rooted urban challenges. Social justice, sense of place, citizens' rights, gentrification, resilience, energy consumption, privacy, and autonomy cannot be addressed through technological layering alone.
This realisation forms the foundation of my work. Smart cities require more than digital optimisation. They require a shift in consciousness, governance, and ethical orientation.
◆ The Paradigm Shift
About the Book
Cities as
WE SPACEs
We have spent decades building cities that are "smart" but hollow. Since 2010, my work has been dedicated to a single, radical mission: proving that mindfulness is not just a personal practice, but an engineering framework.
Rooted in the traditions of Mindfulness-Based Stress Reduction and forged during a transformative awakening in Kathmandu, my approach challenges the techno-centric status quo.
We are moving toward a paradigm where digital innovation is no longer a top-down mechanical imposition, but an organic extension of human wellbeing.
This is the origin of Mindful Smart Cities. It is a pioneering roadmap for systems that are ethically grounded, transparently designed, and above all deeply human.
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It is exceptionally rare and valuable for someone to take such a holistic approach to cities, understanding not only the next major trends in technology but also how these impact what it means to be human and live together in urban environments.
Dr Jaya Brekke
Chief Strategy Officer · NYM Technologies
The Core Concept
What is a
WE SPACE?
A WE SPACE is not a place — it is a field of shared consciousness. The five dimensions together form the architecture of a truly mindful city.
Where the future of humanity is constantly shaped together
Socio-ecological and socio-technological systems growing as one
Intersubjective interfaces exploring possibilities of becoming more
A space of procreation, growth, and collective elevation
Resolving tensions and conflicts between generations and nations
Mindful smart cities have an enormous potential to transform our world. I fully support Shima's pioneering work and hope to work together in order to make my city a mindful, smart one.
Dr Marios Kyriazis
Biomedical Gerontologist and Specialist Physician
In Conversation
Conversation · Human Energy
Why Mindful Smart Cities?
Shima Beigi in conversation with Professor David Sloan Wilson — a deep dive into the philosophical and scientific pillars upon which Mindful Smart Cities are envisioned.
Watch on YouTube ↗
Lecture · Berkeley 2024
Mindful Smart Cities and the Noosphere
Healing Fragmentation in the Information Age
Drawing on Teilhard de Chardin's Noosphere, examined how technological acceleration intensifies the separation of intelligence from wholeness.
Watch on YouTube ↗
Seminar · VUB CLEA · 2023
Going Beyond Techno-Centric Smart Cities
Centre Leo Apostel Seminar Series
The Mindful Smart Cities framework offers an action-oriented roadmap — a therapeutic pathway for transforming smart cities from the inside out.
Watch on YouTube ↗
Talk · VUB CLEA AI & Values · 2025
The Ethics Theatre
On AI, Power, and the Fiction of Values
Much of today's AI ethics discourse risks becoming a public performance of values that leaves underlying power structures intact. A critical examination of what AI reveals about the values we have already abandoned.
Watch on YouTube ↗Her concept of mindful, smart cities is based on a proposition that I strongly agree with: "Human beings are not programmable. This means that there are parts of human existence, namely human spirit, spontaneity, creativity, curiosity, empathy, and love, that cannot be programmed and manipulated with, or by, AI."
Dr Harry Halpin
Research Scientist · CEO & Founder, NYM Technologies SA
◆ Governance Instrument
MSC Readiness
Diagnostic Tool
An Invitation to Design Differently
A five-layer assessment that classifies where your city sits on the spectrum from technocratic optimisation to mindful urban intelligence.
/25
Maximum Score
◆ The Framework Applied — Quick Start
Answer 10 simple questions across five layers: Intelligence Architecture, Institutional Maturity, Human Dignity, Adaptive Intelligence, and Structural Balance. Get your MSC Readiness Index and recommendations for transformation.
This diagnostic is based on the Mindful Smart Cities framework by Shima Beigi, PhD. For a full assessment and executive consultation, contact the author.