The city full of information.
Are the citizens
listening to it?
Monuments, urban furniture, signage, public facilities… urban space has a lot to say but has no digital voice. OKTICS connects the city with its citizens turning any urban element into a point of information, interaction and data — no apps, no costly infrastructure.
What city councils
and urban managers tell us
Municipalities, urban furniture companies, heritage managers and tourism operators share the same blockers when digitalising public space. Can you relate?
Public information arrives late, is static and hard to update
Printed posters, information panels and tourist leaflets go out of date quickly and their replacement has a high cost. When information changes, there is no agile way to reach the citizen already standing in front of the urban element. The result: incorrect information, frustrated citizens and administrations overwhelmed by enquiries.
Cultural heritage and urban tourism have no digital layer
Monuments, historic squares, urban art elements… have a rich history but no mechanism to share it with the visitor standing in front of them. Without information accessible from the element itself, the tourist depends on external guides or insufficient signage, missing the added value of local heritage.
Smart urban furniture requires costly infrastructure
The usual digital solutions for public space involve screens, electrical connections, connectivity and continuous maintenance. The deployment and operating cost makes city-wide scaling unfeasible. Many projects remain as pilots or high-traffic areas, leaving the rest of the territory without service.
There is no data on how public space is used
The administration makes decisions about facilities, services and communication without really knowing how citizens interact with urban space. Without usage data, no optimisation is possible: resources are invested in underused services and high-demand areas are left unattended.
The city that responds
when citizens ask
OKOTags NFC/QR integrated into any urban element: bollards, benches, lampposts, signs, monuments, signage. No electricity, no wifi, no maintenance. Just scan and connect.
Digital identity for every urban element
Each bollard, bench, monument or sign receives a unique identifier linked to its digital record: location, history, associated services, maintenance status. The urban element stops being anonymous and starts having its own traceable data.
OKO IdentityCitizen information from public space
The citizen scans an OKOTag on any urban element and accesses contextual information: history of the place, nearby services, municipal notices, cultural agenda, transport status. Content updatable in real time from OKOCloud without touching the physical tag.
OKO ExperienceUrban furniture management and maintenance
Maintenance operatives scan the element's tag to log interventions, consult the technical history and report incidents. Everything is documented and traceable. The administration has the status of every urban asset in real time — no paper, no calls.
OKO LogisticsUrban space usage data
Every interaction with an OKOTag generates anonymous data: when, where, what information citizens are looking for. OKO Analytics turns that data into intelligence to optimise services, prioritise investments and demonstrate project impact to decision-makers.
OKO AnalyticsAsí funciona en
your municipality or project
Three real scenarios of how administrations, urban furniture manufacturers and heritage managers are using OKTICS today.
Tourism and cultural heritage
Smart urban furniture
Municipal communication and citizen services
Let's talk about your urban project
In 30 minutes we'll show you how the digital point network would look in your municipality, what information you could offer and what data we'd capture from the first scan.
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