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?
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. prototyping skedsmo
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
No one wants the municipality to fail at delivering a new school or a safe pedestrian path. But failing small —through a two-day cardboard prototype or a one-week service simulation—is a gift. It saves money. It builds trust. And it leads to solutions that actually fit Skedsmo’s streets, schools, and people. Today, Skedsmo (as part of Lillestrøm commune) is
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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.