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Welcome in Paris to the first living labs summer school at the “Cité des sciences”

Welcome in Paris to the first living labs summer school at the “Cité des sciences”. Organisers/Sponsors. Scientific aspects Chair: Kul Pawar (UoN, UK) ESoCE.NET, HSLU, INRIA, UoN, Unbla.org, VTT 2) Organisation aspects Chair: B. Trousse (Inria, France)

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Welcome in Paris to the first living labs summer school at the “Cité des sciences”

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  1. Welcome in Paris to the first living labs summer school at the “Cité des sciences”

  2. Organisers/Sponsors Scientific aspects Chair: Kul Pawar (UoN, UK) ESoCE.NET, HSLU, INRIA, UoN, Unbla.org, VTT 2) Organisation aspects Chair: B. Trousse (Inria, France) Two French living labs: ICT usage Lab and Integrative Usage Lab (LUTIN) ESoCE.Net With the great support of Universcience President: Mrs Claudie Haigneré

  3. First LL Summer School AMI community created end of 2009 « Learning living Lab and Open Innovation » Main event of Ami community First edition in France More than 75 participants From more 20 countries (Europe, Canada, Taiwan, Senegal)

  4. Why LLSS? Map the domain of living labs innovation Explore the living labs as a domain of practice and research Build bridges between the many disciplines in which living labs are rooted, and establish links between different and often divergent paradigms Contribute to the development of Living Labs theory Collect and disseminate experiences and insights from practitioners and students Build and strengthen existing LL & networks …

  5. Living Labs Summer School 2010: “Collaborative Innovation through Living Labs” Kul Pawar & Patricia Wolf & Brigitte Trousse Chairs of the ami community « Learning Living Lab and Open Innovation »

  6. LLSS 2010 • Structure of the Programme: • Diverse LL disciplines will be explored • Programme will enable interaction • Opportunities for more in depth (advanced) LL discussions • Content of the Programme: • Each day will have specific themes • LL from a Multidisciplinary Perspective • User Communities and Networks • LL for SMEs • Innovation • Linking LL Research and Practice • Understanding and Supporting innovations in practice • Output: • Living Labs Handbook • Step-by-step guide on how to operationalise LL

  7. Programme – Day 1 Mapping the landscape Welcome and introduction (Mrs Claudie Haignere, Brigitte Trousse, Claudio Vandi) Introduction, purpose and agenda (Kul Pawar, Patricia Wolf, Brigitte Trousse) Overview of Living Labs in Europe (Roberto Santoro) Networking (Who is who, who is into what) (Patricia Wolf) Domain mapping: Typology of Living Labs and related work (Patricia Wolf, Kul Pawar) Design of as-is Living Lab landscape (Kul Pawar, Marc Pallot, Patricia Wolf) Re-cap

  8. Programme – Day 2 Exchanging experiences and practices • Keynote speaker to illustrate best practice in Living Labs (Artur Serra) • Specific experiences (regional experiences, best practices, innovations by living labs problems and how were they overcome, on-going problems) (Patricia Wolf, Peter Troxler) • Experience exchange on: • Methodologies, tools and technology used for developing and operationalising LL and bringing innovation about • How to address challenges & issues (Patricia Wolf, Peter Troxler) • Plenary/open session

  9. Programme – Day 3 Emergent Living Lab themes; future Roadmapping Develop ‘to-be’ road maps (vision 2020) (Sami Kazi, Patricia Wolf, Kul Pawar) Revisit typology developed on day 1 (Sami Kazi, Patricia Wolf, Kul Pawar) Identify future challenges and issues (Sami Kazi, Patricia Wolf, Kul Pawar) Who does what in future (problems, solutions, required research areas, impact measurement) (Sami Kazi, Patricia Wolf, Kul Pawar) Open discussion/Feedback (Sami Kazi, Patricia Wolf, Kul Pawar) Farewell lunch

  10. Keynote: Living Labs in Europe Roberto Santoro

  11. The European Network of Living Labs and the User-Driven Open Innovation First Living Lab Summer School 25-27 August 2010 - PARIS Roberto Santoro, ENoLL Vice Preisdent and ESoCE Net President

  12. Brussels launch june 2004 by Commissioner Erkki Liikkanen - More than 300 participants - Election of the Leadership Group i2010 task force and Living Lab special interest group launch – February 2005 4000+ Roberto Santoro – ESoCE NET – 7° April 2008

  13. Living Labs and User Driven Open Innovation • Living Labs are User Driven Open Innovation Platforms where stakeholders have formed a Public-Private-People-Partnership (PPPP) of firms, public agencies, universities, institutes and users all collaborating for creating, prototyping, and validating new service-products and societal infrastructures in real-life contexts. Such contexts are cities, villages and rural areas as well as industrial plants.” • A Living Lab empowers users to driveresearch, development and innovation for ICT based services addressing major socio-economic issues (energy and environment; well being, e-health and inclusion; media and creativity; logistics and manufacturing regional development…) • Bringing users early into the creative process, accessing the Collective Intelligence • Bridging the innovation gap between technology development and the uptake of new products and services • Allowing for early assessment of the socio-economic implications of new technological solutions

  14. European Network of Living Labs Member of European Network of Living Labs 14

  15. European Network of Living Labs • 212 Living Labs • Hundreds of public bodies, including Municipalities, Innovation Agencies, Universities... • Thousands of companies, especially SMEs clusters • Hundreds of thousands of final users organized in user communities NOT ON MAP 1st-3rd Wave: Brazil 4 China 1 Mozambique 1 South Africa 2 Taiwan 2 4th Wave: Brazil 3 China 3 Colombia 2 Senegal 1 Taiwan 2 USA 1

  16. ENoLL AISBL Members Type a. The effective members, organisations with legal personality that represent a Living Lab which was duly selected according to the ENoLL selection process, and that pay the annual membership, are called "members". b. The adherent members are organisations that represent a Living Lab which was duly selected according to the ENoLL selection process, and which have not paid the membership fee. c. The associated members are organisations which are involved in the object and activities of the association, which are not selected according to the ENoLL selection process, and which pay the annual membership or more. General Assembly One representative appointed by/from each member LL, who has payed the annual fee. Council Elected by Founding members Chairmen appointed by council Appointed Function Coordinators Secretariat Appointed by Council Provides basic ”administrative” services to all members, assembly and council. ENoLL AISBL Non Profit Association in Belgium Chairmen Domain Coord.energy, health etc Otherfunctions Council §LEGALFRAMEWORK Policy, Partner &OpenCommunitycoordinators Elect Appoint Service GeneralAssembly ENoLLSecretariat Service Service Appoint EffectiveMembers AdherentMembers LL LL LL LL LL LL LL LL LL LL LL LL LL LL org org org AssociatedMembers org

  17. ENoLL 4th Wave Evaluation Criteria

  18. Open Innovation and LLABSCo-Creating “SMART” COMMONS

  19. JOIN The Open System of Living Labs Communities ! LL-Open LL-Partners Individuals can register at any time at http://www.ami-communities.eu Public Institutions and Industrial Organizations can apply as associated member, LL-Partners of ENoLL at http://www.openlivinglabs.eu LLABS respond to the 5° wave call for membership that will open Dec 2010 Launch in Budapest (FIA event) May2011 Express your interest to create Smart Cieties Dreat Teams at http://www.ami-communities.eu/bscw/bscw.cgi/486189 energy LL-Policy LL-Partners health ENoLL cities regio media

  20. NetworkingPatricia Wolf (HLSU & unBla)

  21. Networking Partner interviews (10 minutes) Select somebody you do not know Interview each other and fill in the profile

  22. Networking Roberto Santoro Roberto Santoro Intermediate Step Take two line cards Write the name of your partner on the first line of each card Put the profile up to the wall

  23. Networking Roberto Santoro Roberto Santoro Kul Pawar Kul Pawar Experiences in organizing a Summer School Experiences in organizing a Summer School • Specify on the third line what they should talk about Exploring connections • Read the profiles at the wall • Select two people to whom your partner should talk to • Write on the second line the name of a person

  24. Networking Connecting Give the two line cards back to your partner Try to identify the two people your partner suggested to you, and TALK TO THEM

  25. Coffee Break

  26. Domain Mapping Aim:To explore the characteristics of Living Labs What are we talking about? What do we know about Living Labs? What characterizes a Living Lab for you? How are topics interlinked?

  27. Domain Mapping Exploring the domain Select a topic area you wish to explore Join a group, and explore the characteristics of your domain

  28. Domain Mapping Search for connections: Walk around, read the notes on the walls of the other groups, and Write down links to your domain, and put them to your wall

  29. Domain Mapping Presentation

  30. Design of as-is Living Lab landscape Kulwant Pawar, Marc Pallot

  31. As-is Living Lab landscape (Question 1) From your experience or knowledge, what are the most crucial or inherent weaknesses/short comings related to your intra and inter-domain? • Each person to list three issues (only one on each post-it note). • (Provide 1 sentence explanation per issue) • Put the post-it notes on the wall (10 mins)

  32. As-is Living Lab landscape (Question 2) Discussion on question 2 in each group (20 mins) Note the key points on a flip chart sheet (1 sheet per group) & stick it on the wall (it will used as a base line on day 3) • How can the specific issues identified as part of Q1 be addressed (for your intra & inter-domain)? • What are the likely/potential constraints?

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