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Biography

Professional biography

Prior to academic life, Matthew worked for 11 years as a professional spatial planner specialising in urban regeneration and sustainability.  He returned to university in 1999 as Research Assistant on a UK Government funded project and completed a doctorate in Innovation and Sustainability.  Following an appointment as Lecturer at Cranfield University in 2003, Matthew joined the Open University in 2009 where he is now Professor of Innovation and leads the Future Urban Environments research team and Technology and Innovation Management qualification.  

Research interests

Matthew's research interests are in innovation and the development of more sustainable urban environments.  Working at the intersection of innovation studies and urban studies his work recognises the situatedness of innovation and the inherent spatiality of this complex socio-technical process.  Much of his current work is concerned with critical perspectives on the governance of smart city innovations, such as urban energy and transport systems, and the policy mobilities that play a profound role in their (re)construction.  

Matthew uses a variety of qualitative research methods including longitudinal case study, ethnography and discourse analysis.  He has secured funding for research from several sources including the Economic and Social Research Council, the Engineering and Physical Sciences Research Council, European Union and various firms from the private sector.  

Teaching interests

Matthew's teaching interests are in innovation and urban development.  He is Qualification Lead for Technology and Innovation Management and Presentation Team Chair of the post graduate module T849 Strategic Capabilities for Technological Innovation.  He is also lead author of a new block concerned with cities and sustainability which will form part of the revised module U116 Environment: Journeys Through a Changing World.

External collaborations

Matthew has developed a number of effective external collaborations with public and private sector organisations including Milton Keynes Council, CGI, Department for Environment, Food and Rural Affairs, British Standards Institute, Western Power Distribution.  

 

International links

Matthew has strong international links with universities in Northern Europe.  He has worked on complex system approaches to urban planning with Drs Ward Rauws and Terry van Dijk from Groningen University, The Netherlands.  He has a strong relationship around teaching and research projects focused on product service systems in cities with Professor Tim McAloone, Danish Technical University, Denmark.  

Finally, he has developed an effective and enduring collaboration on sustainability and innovation in both cities and the food and farming sector with the Swedish Life Sciences University, Uppsala, Sweden, where he is now August T Larsson Visiting Scholar.

Projects

Char.gy Residential Wireless Charging Demonstrator

The proposed research forms part of a bid to the OLEV/Innovate UK call for innovation projects to deliver creative new designs and technologies for low-cost, scalable charging solutions for electric vehicle users without access to off-street parking. This will be done through a demonstrator project to explore the technical options, business models and institutional arrangements required for deploying wireless charging infrastructure for electric vehicles in public spaces. The demonstrator will have a duration of 18 months and will recruit users, community groups and local authorities at three locations -The London borough of Redbridge, the new town of Milton Keynes and a town in Buckinghamshire - allowing an exploration of the role that wireless EV charging infrastructures can play in a variety of urban contexts. The growth in the use of electric vehicles (EVs) needs to accelerate if the targets to reduce transport's C02 emissions are to be achieved as well as meeting health standards for city air quality. The “Road to Zero” strategy published by UK government calls for all new cars and vans to be effectively zero emission by 2040. However, the provision of sufficient charging points to support such a large number of EVs might prove challenging. The provision of charging infrastructure in public spaces will be an important part of the solution, as OLEV estimates indicate that 44% of the motorists in London and 30% in the rest of the UK do not have access to off-street parking. It is not clear that the existing charging point network can be simply scaled up, as a large-scale deployment of wired chargers would create street clutter and the cables connecting the vehicles to the charging points would constitute a health and safety risk for pedestrians. The provision of wireless charging in cities may be useful for reducing street clutter and eliminating the trip hazard. However, the deployment of wireless charging points raises a set of issues that could hold back this policy approach, for example local authorities may be unwilling to install wireless charging points unless the technology is clearly supported by automakers but manufacturers may be hesitant to add wireless charging capabilities to their vehicles if cities do not have the infrastructure to support them. There is a need for a more in-depth understanding of the institutional arrangements necessary to support the successful introduction of wireless charging technologies, to be developed through an exploration of the strategies, culture and practices of industry actors, local authorities, lead users, and ultimately of the communities in which the new infrastructures will be deployed. Thus the proposed socio-technical research programme will amplify the impact of the technical and practical work conducted by partners including Char.gy and the University of Warwick. By developing an understanding of the connections between the social and technical, including innovation intermediaries, product service systems and business models, we will develop a better understanding of the mechanisms through which wireless charging infrastructures might encourage EV adoption in residential areas where conventional wired charging points cannot be conveniently installed. Primary data will be produced through in-depth interviews, lead-user workshops and long-term engagement with relevant community groups (e.g., “Ilford Transition Town” in Redbridge and “Future Wolverton” in Milton Keynes). We will also seek insight on and collaboration with industry actors that can contribute to the emerging wireless charging ecosystem and amplify the impact of the demonstrator.

PhD Studentship - Exploring UK energy futures: implications, opportunities and risks

The UK electricity sector is at a point of change in response to both internal and external pressures: potential new demands for transport and heat; policies to cut carbon emissions and the resultant increased use of renewables; the development of smart grids and new entrants into the sector. However, exactly how the UK electricity sector will change in response to these stimuli is unclear. Indeed, there could be several futures, creating implications, opportunities and risks for key actors. This PhD explores, with experts in the field, some of these futures and the potential implications they will have for Distribution Network Operators (DNOs) among other key actors.

OLEV/Innovate UK Feasibility Study Bid

The growth in the use of electric vehicles (EVs) needs to accelerate if the targets to reduce transport’s C02 emissions are to be achieved as well as meeting health standards for city air quality. Some key commercial transport sectors (e.g. taxis, service vehicles and delivery vans) have the potential for rapid EV adoption, but operators in these sectors have shown little interest in EVs, one factor being the need to use wired charging. The provision of wireless charging in cities could help, but for success there is a need for a more in-depth understanding of the culture, practices and business models of businesses in these sectors. The feasibility study would involve reviewing how wireless charging could play a role in possible technical options and business practices/models for taxi and on demand minivan operations in Milton Keynes. Milton Keynes has undertaken a number of EV innovation initiatives that have provided experience and understandings that can be applied elsewhere. A technical review will take place on potential EVs and charging systems, their performance and cost. This will involve an exploration with operators and cab driver/owners to understand what combinations of charging infrastructure would encourage them towards commercial EV operations. Ways to manage risk and appropriate MK Council support actions would form part of the exploration. The feasibility study would provide the technical and business/institutional specification for the main project, which would be the trial implementation and monitoring of the identified combination of wireless charging infrastructure, supporting actions and business model systems for these sectors. The project is led by the company eFIS (Electric Fleet Integrated Services), who has managed the successful introduction of wireless-charged electric buses in Milton Keynes. The other project partners are the Open University, Milton Keynes Council and the University of Warwick.

Publications

Book

Artificial Intelligence and the City: Urbanistic Perspectives on AI (2024)

Book Chapter

Exploring temporal pleats and folds: the role of urban AI and robotics in reinvigorating the cyborg city (2024)

Introducing AI into urban studies (2024)

Toward an intelligent mobility regime (2023)

Exploring the epistemic politics of urban niche experiments (2019)

Journal Article

The Rise of AI Urbanism in Post-Smart Cities: A Critical Commentary on Urban Artificial Intelligence (2024)

Investigating Digitally Inflected Intercity Cycle Commuting (2024)

Why does urban Artificial Intelligence (AI) matter for urban studies? Developing research directions in urban AI research (2024)

Reinventing public transport: rising to the transition challenge (2024)

Examining the spatialities of artificial intelligence and robotics in transitions to more sustainable urban mobilities (2024)

Humans, robots and artificial intelligences reconfiguring urban life in a crisis (2023)

Urban Planning and the Knowledge Politics of the Smart City (2023)

Curating smart cities (2023)

Demand-responsive transport returns to Milton Keynes - lessons for a bus industry in crisis? (2022)

Beyond automobility? Lock-in of past failures in low-carbon urban mobility innovations (2022)

Is it who you are or what you do? Insights for Mobility as a Service from research on a car club (2021)

Exploring smart city atmospheres: The case of Milton Keynes (2021)

Urban Planning and the Smart City: Projects, Practices and Politics (2020)

Smoothing peaks and troughs: Intermediary practices to promote demand side response in smart grids (2019)

The imagined electric vehicle user: Insights from pioneering and prospective buyers in Milton Keynes, United Kingdom (2019)

Roadmaps to Utopia: Tales of the Smart City (2018)

Exploring participatory visions of smart transport in Milton Keynes (2018)

Product Service System Innovation in the Smart City (2018)

Prototyping sustainable mobility practices: user-generated data in the smart city (2018)

Smart Cities: Towards a New Citizenship Regime? A Discourse Analysis of the British Smart City Standard (2017)

Consuming use orientated product service systems: A consumer culture theory perspective (2017)

Product Service Systems Users and Harley Davidson Riders: the importance of consumer identity in the diffusion of sustainable consumption solutions (2017)

Cycling through Dark Space: Apprehending the Landscape Otherwise (2017)

Governing effective and legitimate smart grid developments (2016)

Sustainable innovation journeys: exploring the dynamics of firm practices as part of transitions to more sustainable food and farming (2016)

Fluid transitions to more sustainable product service systems (2014)

How to Make Development Plans Suitable for Volatile Contexts (2014)

Critical Reflections on Designing Product Service Systems (2013)

Retrofitting homes for energy efficiency: an integrated approach to innovation in the low carbon overhaul of social housing (2012)

Receptivity to the production of product service systems in the UK construction and manufacturing sectors: a comparative analysis (2012)

Financial appraisal of wet mesophilic AD technology as a renewable energy and waste management technology (2011)

Exploring the potential of product service systems to achieve household waste prevention on new housing developments in the UK (2010)

The contested concept of sustainable aviation (2009)

Application of an ecosystem function framework to perceptions of community woodlands (2009)

Towards a contemporary approach for understanding consumer behaviour in the context of domestic energy use (2007)

The adoption of domestic solar power systems: do consumers assess product attributes in a stepwise process? (2007)

Toward a sociology of reuse: deconstructing the milkbottle (2007)

Service orientated product innovation for improved environmental performance: an exploratory case study of the air conditioning and cooling sector (2006)

Producer responsibility, waste minimisation and the WEEE Directive: case studies in eco-design from the European lighting sector (2006)

Transfer and application of product service systems: from academia to UK manufacturing firms (2006)

Report

Achieving Household Waste Prevention Through Product Service Systems, Technical Report 1: Developing an Analytical Framework (2008)

Achieving Household Waste Prevention Through Product Service Systems, Technical Report 6: Developing Performance Indicators (2008)

Achieving Household Waste Prevention Through Product Service Systems, Technical Report 3: Environmental and Waste Prevention assessment (2008)

Achieving Household Waste Prevention Through Product Service Systems, Technical Report 2: Developing Experimental Product Service Systems (2008)

Achieving Household Waste Prevention Through Product Service Systems, Technical Report 4: Social and Economic Assessment (2008)

Achieving Household Waste Prevention Through Product Service Systems, Technical Report 5: Institutional and Policy Review (2008)

Achieving Household Waste Prevention Through Product Service Systems, Technical Report 7: Prospective Case Studies (2008)

Achieving Household Waste Prevention Through Product Service Systems (2008)