Leveraging Smart Open Innovation for Achieving Cultural Sustainability: Learning from a New City Museum Project
Abstract
:1. Introduction
2. Theoretical Background
2.1. The Surge of “Culture” in the Sustainability Debate: Moving Towards Strategy in Practice
2.2. Addressing Cultural Sustainability through Smart Open Innovation: A Conceptual Framework
3. Research Methods
3.1. Case Selection
3.2. Data Collection and Analysis
4. Findings: Addressing Sustainability throughout the New Museum Development Process
4.1. The “Ideation/Design” Stage: The Strategic Goals of Cultural Sustainability
Energy savings and CO2 emissions were not relevant within MuseoTorino development strategy […]. The impacts produced for the environment are not relevant not the least when considering that MuseoTorino exists only as an on-line museum and, consequently, it does not produce the level of consumption, including energy, of a physical museum.(KI2)
cultural tourism development (e.g., an economic sustainability area, authors’ note) was not among the initial objectives of MuseoTorino.(KI3)
the improvement of wellbeing and quality of life as well as a higher awareness of citizens about their city were also included among the main goals of MuseoTorino.[KI2]
(the museum’s goal is to) preserve, improve, document and communicate knowledge. Its heritage consists of contemporary places and the spaces where it is possible to find, in the form of more or less visible signs, traces and cues, the whole history of the city.[92]
for giving an answer also on a cultural level, to the increasing disorientation, a source of estrangement and insecurity, that the big city produces,[92]
also the meaning attributed to the process of constructing a public memory is new. Indeed, MuseoTorino aimed at involving all the people who keep and communicate the traces and the evidence of the city history.[93]
involving a continuously increasing number of actors, especially all the citizens interested in and available to contribute to the growth of the museum by sharing their knowledge, know-how, memories as well as proposing ideas, initiatives and projects.[92]
feeling as truly natives for all the time they decide to stay in the city.[92]
a tool available to the curious and the passionate, to the teacher and the student.[92]
4.2. The “Analysis and Development” Stage: Realizing Cultural Sustainability in Practice
various partners involved in the different sub-projects and yards had no formal neither informal financial commitment since all the related activities would be realized, as a basic rule, through specific public funding allocated to the overall city museum project.(KI3)
At the basis of the machine there is the trust of the financing body who has recognized an original idea (...). Without this economic fuel nothing would have happened, but (..) in the mechanism of the contract/trust the financing partner did not only have the means. Actually, he has been an active part of the process; the lever and the goal, both together, have led to reinforcing social capital among different parties.
each partner had previous experience of cooperation and there was a reciprocal acknowledgement of competences...there had been a convergence of factors related, among others, to the research interests of universities, the Municipality’s willingness to sustain the smart development of the city, and the diffusion of initiatives and instruments that were able to encourage partnerships’ formation and networking activities.(KI3)
Each yard is associated to a working group. Each is created according to specific competences required to pursue the goal of the sub-project [….]. It is the Scientific Committee that decides in which yard to invest and which to support.(KI2)
the adjective “federal” evokes the right ideas since it tries to describe the most innovative and stimulating managerial aspects that characterize a dynamic and changeable entity (i.e., MuseoTorino); in a federation there is a pact stipulated among actors who preserve their autonomy and who, consequently, join together because they share a common goal, by providing the specific inputs that they own.[97]
At partnership level, there was a process of cross-fertilization among different partners that had led to an increase in the knowledge and social capital of partners owned with complementary resources and competences.(KI3)
although each yard constituted a distinct and independent working group based on distinctive competences, all the key decisions were centralized in the leading partner (the city municipality, authors’ note).(KI2)
4.3. The “Launch and Delivery” Stage: Reinforcing Cultural Sustainability-Oriented Practices
[nowadays] all working relations within each yard have been formalized. In an overall unifying perspective, they assume the form of peer-to-peer relationships […]. The city municipality puts itself at the center of relationships among partners.(KI3)
From the commitment to the city-user it has drawn an impulse to go further in the perspective to assign to the citizens the role of protagonists and not only that of recipients of museum policies. This by allowing them to become, to different degrees and levels of involvement, agents of the work of protection and enhancement of the cultural heritage.[98]
5. Discussion and Conclusions
Public-private partnerships including 160 actors and 66 different city stakeholders “called to” work together around a number of different thematic tables including, among others, energy, mobility, health, life, inclusion and culture.(KI1)
[…] Economic impact was circumscribed and derived from few projects. Notably, in the digitalization project we could take advantage of a funding opportunity from Compagnia San Paolo (an Italian bank, authors’ note) that made available to workers who had been receiving lay-off benefits training and supplementary income vouchers.
The lack of funding has tremendously diminished the potential of the project. The economic impact was not relevant considering that it led to the enrollment of only eight scientific professionals in the period 2010–2011
The website is visited only by foreign experts but it is not appealing to tourists.(KI3)
We have not realized any study or research to evaluate the social impact of MuseoTorino. Consequently, we cannot quantify in any way the impact of MuseoTorino in terms of the improvement of life quality and awareness of Turin citizens, that were key objectives of the project.
There have been 622.570 visits on the website and 424.826 single visitors, since the launch of the website (on 17 March 2011) to the 31st December 2013, with a high percentage of access from other sites, also thanks to the semantic structure of the website that enables its high position within search engines (especially Google).(KI2)
Author Contributions
Acknowledgments
Conflicts of Interest
References
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Errichiello, L.; Micera, R. Leveraging Smart Open Innovation for Achieving Cultural Sustainability: Learning from a New City Museum Project. Sustainability 2018, 10, 1964. https://doi.org/10.3390/su10061964
Errichiello L, Micera R. Leveraging Smart Open Innovation for Achieving Cultural Sustainability: Learning from a New City Museum Project. Sustainability. 2018; 10(6):1964. https://doi.org/10.3390/su10061964
Chicago/Turabian StyleErrichiello, Luisa, and Roberto Micera. 2018. "Leveraging Smart Open Innovation for Achieving Cultural Sustainability: Learning from a New City Museum Project" Sustainability 10, no. 6: 1964. https://doi.org/10.3390/su10061964