Living Labbing the Rotterdam Way: Co-Creation as an Enabler for Urban Innovation

The living lab concept seems appropriate to study the design and evaluation of innovative services that enrich everyday life. This article elaborates on “living methodologies”, methods and tools necessary in "living labbing". Living methodologies address the social dynamics of everyday lif...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Ingrid Mulder
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Carleton University 2012-09-01
Series:Technology Innovation Management Review
Subjects:
Online Access:http://timreview.ca/sites/default/files/article_PDF/Mulder_TIMReview_September2012.pdf
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spelling doaj-8276d5e629f141879b6bc9bafcb634e22020-11-24T23:33:15ZengCarleton UniversityTechnology Innovation Management Review1927-03212012-09-01September 2012: Living Labs3943Living Labbing the Rotterdam Way: Co-Creation as an Enabler for Urban InnovationIngrid MulderThe living lab concept seems appropriate to study the design and evaluation of innovative services that enrich everyday life. This article elaborates on “living methodologies”, methods and tools necessary in "living labbing". Living methodologies address the social dynamics of everyday life that are essential for understanding living labs, not only conceptually, but also as mature methodologies for fostering innovation in real-life contexts. We report on three cases from Rotterdam in the Netherlands, where "living labbing" was used to enable citizens to co-develop their city. These cases utilized visual ethnography as a research method and prototyping and co-creating as design tools. The cases not only inspire citizen participation, but also inform social innovation and city’s policymaking. The user-driven approach, do-it-yourself mindset, and the participatory character perfectly fit with the down-to-earth attitude of Rotterdam residents. http://timreview.ca/sites/default/files/article_PDF/Mulder_TIMReview_September2012.pdf co-creationcontextual researchdesign techniquesliving methodologiesparticipatory design
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Ingrid Mulder
spellingShingle Ingrid Mulder
Living Labbing the Rotterdam Way: Co-Creation as an Enabler for Urban Innovation
Technology Innovation Management Review
co-creation
contextual research
design techniques
living methodologies
participatory design
author_facet Ingrid Mulder
author_sort Ingrid Mulder
title Living Labbing the Rotterdam Way: Co-Creation as an Enabler for Urban Innovation
title_short Living Labbing the Rotterdam Way: Co-Creation as an Enabler for Urban Innovation
title_full Living Labbing the Rotterdam Way: Co-Creation as an Enabler for Urban Innovation
title_fullStr Living Labbing the Rotterdam Way: Co-Creation as an Enabler for Urban Innovation
title_full_unstemmed Living Labbing the Rotterdam Way: Co-Creation as an Enabler for Urban Innovation
title_sort living labbing the rotterdam way: co-creation as an enabler for urban innovation
publisher Carleton University
series Technology Innovation Management Review
issn 1927-0321
publishDate 2012-09-01
description The living lab concept seems appropriate to study the design and evaluation of innovative services that enrich everyday life. This article elaborates on “living methodologies”, methods and tools necessary in "living labbing". Living methodologies address the social dynamics of everyday life that are essential for understanding living labs, not only conceptually, but also as mature methodologies for fostering innovation in real-life contexts. We report on three cases from Rotterdam in the Netherlands, where "living labbing" was used to enable citizens to co-develop their city. These cases utilized visual ethnography as a research method and prototyping and co-creating as design tools. The cases not only inspire citizen participation, but also inform social innovation and city’s policymaking. The user-driven approach, do-it-yourself mindset, and the participatory character perfectly fit with the down-to-earth attitude of Rotterdam residents.
topic co-creation
contextual research
design techniques
living methodologies
participatory design
url http://timreview.ca/sites/default/files/article_PDF/Mulder_TIMReview_September2012.pdf
work_keys_str_mv AT ingridmulder livinglabbingtherotterdamwaycocreationasanenablerforurbaninnovation
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