PAIoT Network: A Unique Regional IoT Network for Very Different
Applications
Stefania Nanni
1,*
and Gianluca Mazzini
2,†
1
LepidaScpa, Viale della Liberazione 15, 40128 Bologna, Italy
2
Engeneering Department, University of Ferrara, Italy
Keywords: IoT Network, LoRaWan, Sensors, IoT Applications.
Abstract: LepidaSpa, the ICT in-house company of the Public Administrations of the Emilia Romagna region, has
realized a regional IoT public network
, based on the LoRaWan
§
technology, free of charge for all public
administrations, as well as to private citizens, potentially enabling the collection of relevant data from
thousands of new sensors and making them accessible to both the owners of the sensors and, limitedly to
institutional or public interest scopes, to every PA entity. The innovative aspects of the proposed solution
mainly concern the extreme simplicity of the sensors installation, the low entry costs for stakeholders, both
public and private, who want to deploy their own sensors, a centralized service that collects and makes data
available in the cloud, the replicability of IoT projects on a regional scale.
1 INTRODUCTION
The Emilia-Romagna Region, through the in-house
company LepidaScpa, has created a regional IoT
network, based on in LoRaWan technology. The
availability of the PAIoT (Internet of Things for the
Public Administration) network at the regional level
is an enabler for the installation of different types of
sensors available to all the interested parties, both
public and private, as it removes the costs of building
the network, collecting and storing the data from the
implementation costs of monitoring systems, leaving
only those relating to the purchase, installation and
maintenance of sensors.
In this innovative model of Public-Private
partnership, individual users have the possibility to
easily install new sensors and create new services,
while the Region and the PAs have thousands of
continuously updated data sets available, coming
from the installed sensors, which allow them to learn
more about what happens in cities and territories.
The first paragraph of this paper illustrates the
main characteristics of the PAIoT network created by
LepidaScpa, while the next paragraph describes three
*
https://www.lepida.net/
http://www.unife.it/it
https://loragis.lepida.it/loragis/
§
https://lora-alliance.org/about-lorawan
examples of IoT projects that use it, with particular
focus to their ease of installation, their cost-
effectiveness, their use in very different domains and
their potential replicability at regional level.
2 THE STATE OF THE ART
Low Power Wide Area Network with wide
geographic coverage and low power consumption, In
are emerged the latest five years.
They operate in the band around the 868 MHz in
Europe and 915 MHz in the USA.
These technologies can be considered a real
innovation in the IoT world as they extend by a factor
of ten the coverage range of the de facto standards
such as ZigBee
A technology that fits into this new trend is the
Lo-Ra™ of Semtech technology. Its advantages
compared to existing technologies for sensor
networks are:
a wider range by 10 times, compared to the
short-range technologies, thanks to a 198dB link
budget (obtained via a spread spectrum modulation)
Nanni, S. and Mazzini, G.
PAIoT Network: A Unique Regional IoT Network for Very Different Applications.
DOI: 10.5220/0010321401070112
In Proceedings of the 10th International Conference on Sensor Networks (SENSORNETS 2021), pages 107-112
ISBN: 978-989-758-489-3
Copyright
c
2021 by SCITEPRESS Science and Technology Publications, Lda. All rights reserved
107
that allows for connections of up to 15 km in the sub-
urban area, 2-5 km in densely populated urban areas
and 2 km inside buildings;
simplified network architecture (nodes sensors
communicate directly with the concentrators)
low consumption of nodes (up to 10 years when
battery powered);
very high network density: a single-concentrator
gateway can connect thousands of nodes (up to
50,000)
very low cost of the transmitting nodes.
All the above features make the Lo-Ra™ system
an optimal solution, in the current scenario, for the
implementation of Internet of Things paradigm,
because a single concentrator can cover a wide area
with a star architecture, which eliminates the
problems associated with multi-hop (routing
problems, latency, etc.) and because is characterized
by high energy efficiency which can enable the
duration of the batteries of nodes even for several
years, without the constraint of the presence of the
power supply.
The Lo-Ra™ of Semtech technology can be used
in private applications (Nanni S., Mazzini G., 2017)
(that is, without necessarily requiring the presence of
an operator), and actually there many LoRaWAN
networks around the world, managed by many public
operators or private subjects. The availability of a
regional IoT network, like PaIoT, network can offer
to citizens the opportunity to install thousands of
sensors for their own purposes and to Public
Administrations to learn more about what happens in
cities and territories to better plan and manage them.
3 PAIoT NETWORK
LepidaScpa is the in-house company of Emilia-
Romagna in charge of providing broadband network
to all PAs in the region [Fig.1].
Figure 1: Lepida broadband network.
The simultaneous availability of Lo-Ra™
technology and Lepida broadband network makes a
perfect synergy for the deployment of an IoT network
at regional level, PAIoTnetwork, available to public
administrations, companies and citizens.
Fig.2 shows the current status of implementation
of the PAIoT network, which will cover all the
provinces of the Emilia-Romagna region when fully
operational.
Figure 2: PAIoT network.
The architecture of PAIoT network, based on
Lepida broadband network, is described in Fig.3 and
relies on the following components:
Figure 3: PAIoT network architecture.
1. Sensors (of any kind) which send data to Lo-
Ra™ gateways by means of LoRaWan protocol;
2. LoraWan Gateways which receive data from
LoRaWan sensors are installed in any Access Point
of Lepida network (PAL), in order to use Lepida
broadband network to transmit data to Lo-Ra™
Server;
3. Lo-Ra™ Server: virtual machine installed in one
of the three regional data centers managed by
LepidaScpa, that receives data from LoraWan
Gateways through Lepida broadband network.
The data received from the LoRa server are stored
in a centralized database and are made available
through different interfaces: MQTT protocol, API
and web interfaces.
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The initiative implemented by LepidaScpa and
funded by the Emilia-Romagna Region has the
following main objectives:
1. create a public IOT Network where citizens,
private companies and PAs can integrate their own
sensors, making them available to owners and PA
entities limitedly to institutional and public interest
goals.
2. allow citizens and private companies to collect
data from their own sensors wherever they want to
install it.
3. allow PA access to data collected by all the
sensors installed in the territory for monitoring
purposes.
4. enable IOT development through a unique Lo-
Ra™ network managed by PA with a rational usage
of the frequencies and resources optimization.
5. map all the existing sensors in the territory
through a sensor register providing all the technical
parameters and the owner identification.
On top of the data collection, transport, storage
and data retrieval services, LepidaScpa also offers the
decoding service of the payload, for immediate use of
the data by the owners of the sensors and, in
anonymized form, by the PA.
Their use in terms of business intelligence or in a
holistic perspective, by the Public Administrations is
constantly evolving and monitored because it not only
depends on the type of sensors installed and on their
location on the territory, but also on the future needs
or opportunities.
Any development of applications or specific
interfaces for analysis and synthesis, however, is
entrusted to individual owners of the sensors,
according to the purposes for which they have
installed them.
4 CASE STUDIES
4.1 Care Residence of Novi
ASP Terre d'Argine di Carpi is a non-economic
public body, which aims to deliver social and health
care services to people in not self-sufficient
conditions (seniors or disabled) in the Municipalities
of the District (Campogalliano, Carpi, Novi of
Modena and Soliera).
The hospitality centres managed by the ASP are:
Casa Residenza “Ten. L. Marchi” – Carpi
Care-Residence “R. Rossi” – Novi di Modena
Centro Diurno “Il Carpine” – Carpi
Centro Diurno “Borgofortino” – Carpi
Centro Diurno “De Amicis” – Carpi
Centro Diurno “R. Rossi” – Novi di Modena
Centro Ospitalità per Adulti Ex-Carretti – Carpi
With the aim to providing innovative services,
using digital technologies to support vulnerable
people, a case study was launched at the Care
Residence in Novi di Modena to detect some
environmental parameters of the apartments where
guests live independently, in order to constantly
monitor their well-being conditions and report any
abnormal or critical ones.
In particular, in about ten apartments, one or two
motion sensors have been installed, capable of
detecting the passage and time of stay of a person in
a certain area, and an environmental sensor for
monitoring temperature, humidity and lighting level.
Continuous monitoring of the aforementioned
simple parameters makes it possible to verify that
guests lead a regular life, moving during the day and
resting at night, in a comfortable, properly lit and air-
conditioned environment at different times of the day.
Any detections of lack of movement during the
day or vice versa, of frequent movements or
prolonged levels of light during the night, can be
indicators of abnormal conditions and as such
reported to the operators responsible, so that they can
evaluate the importance and possible intervention.
Figure 4 shows the floorplan of the apartments of
the Care Residence in Novi di Modena and the typical
positioning of the motion sensors (blue) in the kitchen
and in the bedroom in the case of two motion sensors,
or in the kitchen in the case of a single sensor. The
environmental sensor (green) in the kitchen in both
cases.
Figure 4: Apartments Floorplan in the Care-Residence “R.
Rossi” – Novi di Modena.
PAIoT Network: A Unique Regional IoT Network for Very Different Applications
109
Figure 5 shows an example of the dashboard of
the daily data received and analysed: in this specific
case only one movement has been detected during the
night, a practically constant and pleasant temperature
throughout the day (24 °C) has been measured, but a
night brightness higher than the expected level (20
lumens) has been observed for a long period of time
and it has been therefore reported.
Figure 5: Dashboard.
The encouraging results obtained from this first
experimentation are the basis for its possible
extension in both quantitative terms, to other
structures managed by the ASP, and in qualitative
terms, through the addition of sensors such as, for
example, a water sensor to determine the use of the
shower or a magnetic sensor to determine the opening
of the external door and, therefore, the good practice
of properly leaving the house.
The ease of installation of the sensors, due to the
battery power supply and the coverage of the PAIoT
network of the other potentially involved structures,
constitute the boundary conditions for this extension
to be easily achieved at regional level, exploiting the
know-how acquired on the use, interpretation and
correlation of the parameters monitored and the
correspondingly realized dashboards.
4.2 Smart City: Municipality of Carpi
(Modena)
The Smart City in Carpi is becoming reality: the
municipal council signed on 29 July 2020 a
memorandum of understanding with the Emilia
Romagna Region and Lepida Scpa started to install
dozens of sensors by the year 2020 in the municipal
area, which will collect data on environmental
dynamics to make them analysed, returned and
monitored in real time."
The pilot project - which in terms of LoRa
technology has no equal in size in the Region and
perhaps in the rest of Italy, and is inspired by the most
advanced European cities includes the installation
of dozens of sensors capable of recording in a
capillary way extremely valuable measures such as
the concentrations of fine dust and carbon dioxide, the
temperature and humidity of the air, the water levels
in the canals and the flows of vehicular traffic.
The data generated by the various sensors
installed on the territory define a punctual reality,
made up of constantly updated information, which
allows us to better understand what happens in the
cities and territories.
It should be emphasized that the data will not be
intended only for insiders, but will be available for
consultation by citizens, through dashboard that will
be developed by Lepida Scpa.
Table 1 summarizes the number of sensors
expected within the Smart City project of Carpi.
Table 1.
TYPE
DESCRIPTION
PROJECT
A TEMPARTAURE HUMIDITY-NO-NO2-
PM2.5-PM5-PM10
30
B TEMPARATURE-UMIDITY-CO2-NO-
NO2-PM2.5-PM5-PM10
4
C WEATHER STATION 4
D TEMPERATURE - AIR & SOIL 4
E HIDROMETER 3
F RAIN GAUGE 3
G NUMBER AND SPEED OF VEHICLES 83
TOTAL 131
Figure 6 shows the distribution of the different
types of sensors expected within the urban area of the
Municipality of Carpi.
Figure 6: Distribution of Sensors in Carpi.
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Figures 7 and 8 respectively show the graphs of a
rain gauge and an air control unit installed in the
Municipality of Carpi, through which it is possible to
highlight the amount of precipitation and the
concentration of fine dust with greater detail on the
territory than already taken place at the regional level.
Figure 7: Graph of Rain Gauge Sensors.
Figure 8: Graph of Air Control Sensors.
The star architecture that characterizes the PAIoT
network, in which the sensors communicate directly
with the LoRa gateways, is a key feature for the
installation of a large number of sensors, as required
by a Smart City project.
For that reason, Carpi project can be considered a
pilot project that not only provides the Public
Administration with a very useful knowledge tool to
support Governance and the management of
environmental risks, but also to define guidelines, at
a technological level , in the identification of the most
performing sensors, functional and applicative level,
in the design of the summary dashboards, to support
its replicability in the other 328 Municipalities of the
Emilia-Romagna region, already covered by the
PAIoT network, and interested in the project.
1
http://swamp-project.org/
2
https://cordis.europa.eu/project/id/777112
4.3 Smart Agriculture: University of
Bologna
The third case study concerns the deployment of a
platform for smart water management in agriculture
(Kamienski C., Soininen J., Taumberger M.,
Fernandes S., Toscano A., Salmon Cinotti T., Filev
Maia R., and Neto A. T., 2018) (Zyrianoff I.,
Heideker A., Silva D., Kleinschmidt J., Soininen J.-
P., Salmon Cinotti T., and Kamienski C., 2020)
(Kamienski C., Kleinschmidt J., Soininen J.,
Kolehmainen K., Roffia L., Visoli M., Filev Maia R.,
and Fernandes S., 2018). The platform was developed
within SWAMP, a research project
1
funded by the EU
and by Brazil, within the H2020 framework (EUB-
02-2017 IoT Pilots Call, Grant agreement N.
777112)
2
and focused on the demonstration of
Internet of Things (IoT) technologies in real-world
scenarios.
Four pilots in the agricultural domain were
proposed by SWAMP: one in Spain, one in Italy and
two in Brazil. The case study considered in this paper
is focused on the Italian pilot, located close to Reggio
Emilia within the area managed by the Consorzio di
Bonifica dell’Emilia Centrale (CBEC)
3
.
CBEC manages the delivery of water to farmers
through a network of open canals and the goal of the
pilot is twofold: using sensors and models to detect
crop water needs, and optimizing water delivery
based on water requests made by the farmers (i.e., at
present time more than 15K requests were filed
during the ongoing irrigation season).
One of the main critical aspects in such a scenario
is related to data collection and transmission. The lack
of power sources and the extension of the area
covered impose two main requirements: to use battery
powered sensors and to have access to a low-power
wide area network.
Both requirements were satisfied by adopting the
LoRaWAN technology, supported by the PAIoT
network implemented and maintained by LepidaScpa
and by designing a battery powered multi-sensor node
(see Figure 9), using in this use case to tune the soil
to optimize the irrigation plan.
3
https://www.emiliacentrale.it/
PAIoT Network: A Unique Regional IoT Network for Very Different Applications
111
Figure 9: Battery Powered multi-sensors node.
Figure 10 shows the sensors of the project: in
green the already installed ones, in yellow the ones in
activation phase, and in gray the Lora gateway of the
PAIoT network that cover the interested area.
Figure 10: Sensors installed in Smart-Agriculture.
5 CONCLUSIONS
The applications presented in this paper are a few
examples of how many different domains can take
benefit of the recent advances in technology. In
particular, the advent of LoRaWAN broadens the
range of possible IoT applications.
The effort made by LepidaScpa in providing an
open LoRaWAN network to collect and store data
from the field is a fundamental asset to reduce entry
costs for stakeholders, both public and private, who
want to deploy their own sensor network within the
Emilia Romagna region.
The aim of the PAIoT network is to enable the
installation of thousands of sensors through the
availability of a network infrastructure for the
collection, storage and consultation of data available
to all PAs, companies and citizens of the territory,
delegating to all users interested only in the purchase,
installation and maintenance of the sensors according
to the needs and application areas of interest.
Finally, the PAIoT network coverage is extended
at regional level, and it constitutes the prerequisite
and opportunity for the replicability of pilot projects
on a regional scale.
REFERENCES
Kamienski C., Soininen J., Taumberger M., Fernandes S.,
Toscano A., Salmon Cinotti T., Filev Maia R., and Neto
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management platform for precision irrigation in
agriculture,” in 2018 Global Internet of Things Summit
(GIoTS), pp. 1–6.
Zyrianoff I., Heideker A., Silva D., Kleinschmidt J.,
Soininen J.-P., Salmon Cinotti T., and Kamienski C.,
2020 “Architecting and Deploying IoT Smart
Applications: A Performance–Oriented Approach,”
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Kamienski C., Kleinschmidt J., Soininen J., Kolehmainen
K., Roffia L., Visoli M., Filev Maia R., and Fernandes
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