Prototyping Skedsmo [better] ❲iPhone❳
The old model of public innovation is often described as “waterfall”: plan for months, build for a year, launch, and hope. Prototyping flips that. It’s about learning by making .
Skedsmo has always been a place of connection—bridging urban growth and suburban community life. But like many Norwegian municipalities, it faces a familiar challenge: how do you design better public services, safer school zones, or smarter digital portals without risking time, money, and public trust on untested ideas? prototyping skedsmo
In the private sector, a prototype might be a cardboard model of a new product or a clickable wireframe of an app. For Skedsmo, prototyping means creating low-risk, low-cost versions of a service, space, or process to gather real feedback from real citizens. The old model of public innovation is often
Gone are the days when the municipality would write a 200-page report, approve a budget, and build a full-scale solution before seeing if it actually works. Today, Skedsmo (as part of Lillestrøm commune) is embracing a leaner, smarter approach: build small, test fast, learn quickly. Skedsmo has always been a place of connection—bridging