We invite city governments and organizations working with geospatial data scientists, policy researchers, and the Open Data community from around the world to join the 1000 Cities Challenge.
The 1000 Cities Challenge aims to scale up the Global Observatory of Healthy and Sustainable Cities to include over 1000 cities from across the globe.
The 1000 Cities Challenge provides open access, comparable and evidence-based data, scorecards, and reports on policy and spatial indicators of healthy and sustainable cities.
Join the 1000 Cities Challenge
Use our open access tools to generate policy and/or spatial indicators for your city
Get your city included in the Global Observatory of Healthy and Sustainable Cities and become part of our global collaboration.
Use city indicator reports and scorecards to inform policy, advocacy and research.
Have the opportunity to co-author future publications.
Become involved in the development of new urban policy and planning indicators of healthy and sustainable cities.
Our tools can be used to analyze policies and urban areas at any scale; such as whole metropolitan areas, or smaller parts of a metropolitan area, among others.
Our team provides support for calculating indicators.
When joining the 1000 Cities Challenge you become a member of the Global Observatory of Healthy and Sustainable cities community. With your free membership, you will have access to the following benefits:
Lead and Participate in the analysis for new or ongoing cities in the 1000 Cities Challenge
Listing in the 1000 Cities Challenge Member Directory
Free Quarterly GOHSC e-Newsletter
Potential for you and your work to be featured in our e-newsletter, Website, and Social Media
Featuring and sharing your city launches or events related to the challenge on our e-Newsletter, Website, and Social Media
Access to our live training and Q&A sessions and webinars
You are now being redirected to our indicator tools and software website. We recommend saving or bookmarking the URL to access it directly next time
1
Recruit City Team
Recruit a team to gather the necessary data, use the GOHSC data processing tools to compute policy and spatial indicators for your city, and advocate for their use to improve health and sustainability in your city.
Your city will need people with expertise in:
Government policy
Spatial analysis (including use of Open Access Data) advocacy
Sign up for the 1000 Cities Challenge to gain access to our data processing tools. Fill out the signup form for yourself or your team [Survey asks about city/region, job title, organization, skills, willingness to share results in academic publications, and desired level of engagement (ability to provide data, already run code, advocate, provide funding]
When you complete the survey, you can request to join an already signed up city or regional group, connecting you with other people from your region who have signed up to participate.
Your team will then be contacted by a Regional/Country Coordinator, who can assist you with the next steps.
2
Attend or watch an information and/or training session
City teams attend a short information session and/or training workshop (or watch the recorded webinar) to learn about the steps involved and how to collect, process and analyse policy and/or spatial data.
Download and familiarize yourself with the Policy Checklist.
Review the steps for the Indicators Software available from the Global Observatory website, Resources tab.
Develop a policy data collection plan and identify who will collect the data.
4
Seek advice from country/regional mentor
The Global Observatory team, including country/regional coordinators can act as mentors or guides and will be able to answer questions related to the data collection plan, policy and spatial indicators computation, and generation of the Scorecard and Report.
10
Plan periodic reassessments to monitor progress
Your team can continue to work together to advocate for progress and serve as a resource for city leaders.
Repeating the calculation of indicators every few years provides occasions to celebrate progress, identify continuing, and update goals.
5
Collect data
Policy data
Identify the relevant level(s) of government for your analysis, and the government sectors responsible for the policy areas covered in the Policy Checklist.
Conduct a search of government or public websites and repositories to identify relevant policy documents.
Collections of zipped GTFS feeds to represent public transport service frequency
No
Other
Other custom data, such as points of interest
No
Further information and guidance on how to collect policy and spatial data is available on the Global Observatory website, Resources tab
9
Present results to city leaders & build consensus for an improvement plan
You are now ready to organize one or more meetings or events to present results to city leaders and encourage their use in setting goals to improve policies and environments in your cities.
It is useful to have people from multiple sectors involved in the presentations.There are recordings of local events in which indicators are presented to city leaders on the website.
8
Submit your data, Scorecard, and Report for inclusion on the Global Observatory of Healthy and Sustainable Cities website
Send your city’s finalised Scorecard and/or Report to info@healthysustainablecities.org, for upload to the Global Observatorywebsite.
Your city will officially be included in the 1000 Cities Challenge, and city teams will become part of our Global Healthy and Sustainable City-Indicators Collaboration.
7
Compute spatial and policy indicators using the Global Healthy & Sustainable City Indicators (GHSCI) Software
Check your data and indicator results to ensure they are as accurate as possible. Validation checklists and the Global Observatory team will assist with validation.