Hello community!
Me and 2 colleagues are structuring a circular business here in the Netherlands and we are looking for a tech partner to help us with the creation of an app and develop a communication system that will improve logistics for transportation, all this to boost circularity in our business model. The tech solution we build together will be part of a circular chain project that we will present for governments.
I am more than happy to discuss this further with whoever is interested :)
Cheers!
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Demoday #28: Designing for Circularity in the Port of Amsterdam

During Demoday #28, we focused on one of the key challenges in the circular transition: how can we make the Port of Amsterdam fully circular?
The Amsterdam port is one of the largest in Europe. It functions as a major energy hub, where fossil fuels still play a central role, and as an industrial hub, where massive flows of raw materials pass through. The City of Amsterdam has set the ambitious goal of becoming fully circular by 2050. This means the port must transform as well. This is a complex and far-reaching task that requires collaboration and innovation.
In this work session, we zoomed in on circular design: how can we make products and processes circular from start to finish?
A closer look at the port
James Hallworth, Commercial Manager at Port of Amsterdam, opened the session by taking the group on a tour through the world of the port. Located in the western harbour area, the port has two main responsibilities. First, it ensures the smooth and safe handling of all maritime traffic on behalf of the City of Amsterdam. Second, it manages and develops the land and industrial areas around the harbour.
To tackle circularity, Port of Amsterdam applies industrial ecosystem thinking. In nature, waste does not exist, and the same principle should apply here. The port aims to build collaborative networks between companies, where waste flows from one company becomes raw materials for another. There is already significant activity around recycling and recovery, but more can be done in higher-value strategies on the R-ladder, such as repurposing, remanufacturing, and refurbishment. Circular by design is a key concept in this shift.
The port is transitioning from measuring success in tons to measuring added value. This shift also means thinking differently about space: circular systems require space to receive, process, and recover valuable materials from waste streams.
Getting hands-on with circular design
Creating a fully circular production process is easier said than done. That’s why we worked through two real-world cases: construction materials and e-bikes. Participants split into groups and explored what a truly circular production process might look like. We also explored the potential role the port could play as an enabler of circular supply chains.
Some key takeaways from the session:
• Material passports: A digital document containing material properties and origin can greatly simplify recycling and reuse.
• Monomaterials: Products made from a single type of material are much easier to separate and recycle at the end of life.
• Smart synergies: Mapping which companies can use each other’s waste flows as input can unlock huge circular potential.
• Financial incentives: Right now, circular processes are often more expensive than linear ones. Smart financial mechanisms could help bridge that gap.
• E-bike challenges: In the case of e-bikes, batteries were flagged as a challenge. Recycling them is still very difficult, and since they are mostly produced outside of Europe, it’s hard to have control over the production process.
This session invited participants to take a step back and view products through a circular lens. The port has the potential to become a key player in the circular transition, but to get there, it will need ideas, insights, and input from across the network.
<strong>Do you have ideas on how the Port of Amsterdam can become more circular? Or would you like to contribute to future sessions? Get in touch with Noor at noor@amsterdaminchange.com. A big thank you to James Hallworth from Port of Amsterdam for bringing this challenge to the network, and Yanti Slaats (Amsterdam University of Applied Sciences) for moderating the session.</strong>
Vacancy: PhD position on The Organization of Innovation for Sustainability Transition at Vrije Universiteit Amsterdam
Have you obtained a master's degree in social and/or organization sciences, and would you like to study innovation and change? Then consider joining our interdisciplinary team with a PhD research on accelerating sustainability transitions!
This PhD position is part of an interdisciplinary team of three PhD researchers, one postdoc, and two senior researchers in the project ‘EXTRA’: <em>From EXperiment to sustainable change: TRAnsformative methodologies for innovation and learning</em>. EXTRA is a collaboration between multiple universities and public and private partners to research and advance physical and experimental environments as enabling methodologies for learning and innovation, also known as living labs.
Living labs are applied by various change-makers, including governmental actors, industry partners, NGOs, researchers, and citizens, to co-create innovations. However, while much experimentation and innovation occur, achieving long-term systemic change remains difficult. Therefore, the main purpose of EXTRA is to amplify the transformative power of living labs with novel insights, instruments, and human capacities, thus enabling change-makers to make sustainable changes and societal impacts.
In the consortium this PhD research will focus on the organization of innovation to accelerate sustainability transition. More specifically, by gathering knowledge and analyses across different fields and cases, this research will identify and validate (inter)organizational approaches, interventions, and business models to overcome barriers and enable the public-private collaboration needed for embedding, translating, and scaling innovations.
For more information about the project, please visit: https://www.nwo.nl/nieuws/financiering-voor-onderzoeksproject-over-fysieke-experimentele-omgevingen ; https://www.tudelft.nl/2024/bk/nwo-financiering-voor-innovatief-onderzoek-naar-fysieke-experimentele-omgevingen.
Innovation Dinner Robotica
𝗥𝗼𝗯𝗼𝘁𝗶𝗰𝗮 𝗯𝗶𝗲𝗱𝘁 𝗸𝗮𝗻𝘀𝗲𝗻. 𝗠𝗮𝗮𝗿 𝗮𝗹𝗹𝗲𝗲𝗻 𝗮𝗹𝘀 𝗷𝗲 𝘄𝗲𝗲𝘁 𝘄𝗮𝗮𝗿 𝗷𝗲 𝗺𝗼𝗲𝘁 𝗯𝗲𝗴𝗶𝗻𝗻𝗲𝗻.
Welke taken kun je automatiseren zonder je hele proces om te gooien?
Hoe weet je of cobots geschikt zijn voor jouw productieomgeving?
En wat kost het – in tijd, geld én kennis – om echt aan de slag te gaan?
Op woensdag 23 april organiseren we een Innovation Dinner over robotica, samen met BouwLab R&Do – speciaal voor professionals in de maak- en bouwsector die serieus werk willen maken van slimme productie.
Franc Mouwen (European Innovation Council) deelt zijn inzichten over technologische doorbraken en de stappen die bedrijven écht verder helpen – van technische kennis opbouwen tot financiering en samenwerking.
Na het dinner kun je kiezen voor een tweedelige workshopreeks waarin we samen de praktijk induiken: wat werkt, waar begin je en hoe zorg je dat het blijft werken?
📅 Workshops: 7 & 14 mei | 13.00-17.00 uur
🆓 Deelname is kosteloos
𝗩𝗿𝗮𝗴𝗲𝗻? Mail Sem via sem@3dmz.nl.