Login
Join
News Tim Ruijters's picture
News by Tim Ruijters .
Posted on September 27th 2018
+
1

Contact with civilians

This week a joined a challenge of the government of Haarlem. The challenge is how we can improve the contact with civilians. See https://r2.miraheze.org/wiki/Contact_met_inwoners for more info.


1 Comment

You need an account to comment
Login
Sign up
Frederike Kuipers's picture
Frederike Kuipers on September 28th 2018 - 09:07

See Gebiedonline : https://amsterdamsmartcity.com/projects/gebiedonline-q401tgsl

Topics

Want to receive updates like this in your inbox?

Get notified about new updates, opportunities or events that match your interests.

Set up preferences

Maybe you will also like these updates

Frans-Anton Vermast, Strategy Advisor & International Smart City Ambassador at Amsterdam InChange, posted May 23rd

“We’re not just creating technology for cities—we’re creating better cities for people.” From Global Goals to Local Action: How Amsterdam Is Building a Smarter, Fairer City

Featured image

As the world grapples with massive challenges—climate change, rapid urbanisation, digital disruption, and growing inequality—some cities are not waiting for top-down solutions. They are rolling up their sleeves and experimenting with new ways to improve life for everyone, block by block. Amsterdam is one of those cities.

That’s why I was proud to share Amsterdam InChanges approach to smart, inclusive urban innovation at the #CIPPCD2025 conference in Aveiro.

Through our open innovation platform, <strong>Amsterdam InChange</strong>, the city has become a global leader in turning lofty global ambitions into practical, local action. But Amsterdam’s model isn’t built around flashy tech or utopian blueprints. Instead, it’s grounded in an essential question: How can we use innovation to improve people’s everyday lives?

Local Action for Global Challenges
Amsterdam understands that the climate crisis, digital transition, and social inequality can’t be solved by government alone—or by technology alone. That’s why it launched Amsterdam Smart City in 2009 as a public-private partnership. What began as small-scale energy-saving pilots has grown into a community of over 8,500 members, coordinating more than 300 projects across the city and beyond.
The approach is rooted in co-creation. Citizens, companies, knowledge institutions, and government actors come together to design, test, and scale solutions that serve the public good. The values that guide the network are clear: people first, openness, transparency, learning by doing, and public value.

The Doughnut as a Compass
Amsterdam was the first city in the world to embrace Doughnut Economics as a guiding framework. The “City Doughnut,” developed with economist Kate Raworth, helps policymakers balance the city’s ecological footprint with the social foundations that all citizens need: housing, education, health, equity, and more. It’s a tool to align every local decision with both planetary boundaries and human dignity.
This framework has inspired circular construction strategies, neighbourhood energy co-ops, and more inclusive procurement policies. It shows that global concepts can become real when grounded in local practice.

Making Innovation Inclusive
One of Amsterdam’s core beliefs is that smart cities must be <strong>inclusive cities</strong>. That means tackling issues like <strong>mobility poverty</strong>, where rising transport costs and digital-only services make it harder for low-income or elderly residents to get around.
Through the <strong>Mobility Poverty Challenge</strong>, Amsterdam partnered with the Province of North Holland and researchers from DRIFT to understand where and how exclusion occurs—and to design better public mobility systems. Pilot ideas like a “Mobility Wallet” (a subsidy for essential travel) and more inclusive digital apps emerged from real conversations with affected residents.
The same inclusive mindset guides Amsterdam’s digital transformation. In the suburb of Haarlemmermeer, officials flipped the script on e-government. Instead of asking citizens to become “digitally skilled,” they asked how government systems could become more <strong>humane</strong>. This led to simplified interfaces, better access to services, and ultimately more trust.

Responsible Tech and Energy from the Ground Up
Tech transparency is another pillar of the Amsterdam model. The city runs the world’s first <strong>Algorithm Register</strong>, giving the public insight into how AI and automated systems are used in services—from traffic enforcement to housing applications. Anyone can access this register, offer feedback, and better understand how digital decisions are made.
In the energy space, the city supports both bold innovation and careful upscaling. At the <strong>Johan Cruijff ArenA</strong>, used electric vehicle batteries store solar energy, powering concerts and matches with clean backup power. At the same time, a coalition of partners led by Amsterdam InChange is working to scale up Local Energy Systems by collecting lessons learned and creating a toolkit for community-led energy.

What Makes It Work?
If there’s one secret to Amsterdam’s success, it’s the governance model: small, neutral facilitation teams guiding large multi-stakeholder coalitions, anchored by public trust and shared purpose. Regular Demo Days allow project teams to showcase progress, get feedback, and adapt. This culture of transparency and iteration helps avoid the so-called “innovation graveyard,” where pilot projects go to die.
The city also embraces failure—as long as it’s shared and learned from. Reports like “Organising Smart City Projects” openly list lessons, from the importance of strong leadership to the need for viable business models and continuous user involvement.

An Invitation to Other Cities
Amsterdam’s smart city is not a blueprint—it’s a mindset. Start with your biggest local challenge. Bring the right people together. Make space for experimentation. Build bridges between local and global. And, above all, put citizens at the centre.
As international smart city ambassador Frans-Anton Vermast puts it: “We’re not just creating technology for cities—we’re creating better cities for people.”

The III International Conference on Public Policies and Data Science

Frans-Anton Vermast's picture
News
#CircularCity
11
+
Ioana Biris, co owner at Nature Desks, posted Apr 29th

Neem je werk en je uitdagingen mee naar buiten en vier Outdoor Office Day in het Amsterdamse Bos

Featured image

De stedelijke natuur als jouw werkplek.

Dit jaar in het Amsterdamse Bos waar iedereen duurzame leiders, toekomstdenkers & doeners kan ontmoeten. Zij staan klaar om met jou een rondje Amsterdamse Bos te lopen. Boek een één-op-éen wanderwalk om jouw onderwerp of uitdaging te bespreken.

Of neem jouw overleg mee naar buiten of kom met je laptop het bos in. Inspirerende ‘collega’s’, frisse lucht vers van de bomen en natuurlijk een duurzame barista. Het grote buitenkantoor is 12 juni ingericht met buiten werkplekken & inspiratie.

Ioana Biris's picture
Event
Meet-up from May 12th to Jun 12th
5
+
Ioana Biris, co owner at Nature Desks, posted Apr 18th

Outdoor Office Day 2025

Featured image

On June 12th 2025 we will celebrate the 7th edition of the international Outdoor Office Day. It’s an open invitation to take your work outside, reconnect with the surrounding urban nature around your office.

This year’s theme is 'Connecting with each other’: with your direct colleagues, colleagues from other departments, neighbours, or external relations. Please join the growing network of individuals and companies that take their work outside more and more often. Get inspired whilst you spend time surrounded by urban nature. This enhances new and meaningful relationships, stimulates the flow of good ideas and supports the forging of valuable collaborations.

Please meet our partners and participants:

https://www.outdoorofficeday.nl/participants

If in Amsterdam we invite for wanderwalk with sustainable leaders. Join us in Amsterdamse Bos to discuss your dilemma's, learn from each other and connect.

Ioana Biris's picture
Event
Meet-up on Jun 12th
17
+
More news

Shaping better cities
as an open collective

Shaping better cities as an open collective Shaping better cities as an open collective
  • Updates for you
  • Community
  • About
  • Contact us
  • Visit Amsterdam
  • Discover projects
  • Meet our partners
  • Privacy settings
  • Privacy statement
  • © Amsterdam Smart City
  • Made by Digital Natives