Digital Construction

Building the fictional city that proved the power of digital twins

Image: 195157097 / Data © Kanawat | Dreamstime.com
A year on from the start of the development of the Digital Twin programme’s COP26 demonstrator, the project’s head Sarah Hayes reflects on what it took to develop a tool that could show technical and non-technical audiences alike the power of a digital twin.

For the United Nations Climate Conference COP26 in Glasgow last year, the National Digital Twin programme (NDTp) wanted to create an interactive demonstrator tool to help show how connected digital twins can make infrastructure more resilient to flooding due to climate change.

Part of the NDTp’s Climate Resilience Demonstrator (CReDo) project, the demonstration tool was needed to help show that more resilience is needed within existing utility systems and that collaboration and data sharing is the key to success.

Aimed at non-technical and diverse audiences, including the public, industry and government, the demonstrator could not contain real data or refer to real world locations for security/confidentiality reasons. It needed to include energy, water and telecoms networks and focus on showing the impact of extreme weather, such as flooding.

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