On Monday March 22nd, we invite you to join us for the official opening of the MSc MADE Living Lab Online Exhibition. The exhibition tells nine stories about achieving change in urban sustainability. Experience the learning outcomes of the student Living Labs in an online guided tour and get ready to be inspired!

Curious to dive deeper into the Living Lab stories? The students organize three masterclasses on the same day. In an online workshop of 90 minutes, they share one of their learning experiences with you.

***Register for the exhibition here>>***

Program March 22

09.30-11.00 | Masterclass 1: creating new collaborations in the municipality of Amsterdam
11.15-12.45 | Masterclass 2: User involvement in the Living Lab way of working
13.30-15.00 | Masterclass 3: Living Lab methodologies for technical challenges
16.00-17.00 | Online Exhibition Opening

About the MSc MADE Living Lab
The Living Lab course is part of the MSc MADE graduation year. During this course, the students are connected to partners in the AMS Institute network, or in some cases even create new connections. The course allows them to gain Living Lab experience in a real-life setting. Through tackling cases all over the city, the students work on urban challenges, tinkering with all types of (practical) solutions together with different types of stakeholders. From hydrogen heatmaps to urban water storage, from the transformation of the housing market to reinterpretation of polluted areas, through all these experiences MADE students learn to adopt a living lab way of working.

News

MSc MADE Living Lab Exhibition 2020

Education

After months of hard work, co-creation sessions, research, stakeholder interviews, design, and product development, the first MSc MADE Living Lab website is now online!

News

MSc MADE Living Lab Exhibition 2019

Education

After months of hard work, co-creation sessions, research, stakeholder interviews, design, and product development, the first cohort of MSc MADE students revealed their urban solutions and prototypes in a Living Lab exhibition.

Would you be interested to collaborate with the students?