Open Innovation for the Construction Sector: Concept Overview and Test Bed Development to Boost Energy-Efficient Solutions
Abstract
:1. Introduction
- (i)
- The firm does not bear the whole cost and hazard of the innovation and invention procedure, with the result that more companies now can achieve and realize their innovations, reducing the unused by-products of R&D and licensing to sell the new ones thanks to the increased traceability of IPRs;
- (ii)
- Innovation is technically less burdensome and challenging for the company, thanks to the possibility of outsourcing some features of R&D and using outer business networks for its creations, also resulting in a shorter time to market;
- (iii)
- Globalization ensures the full mobility of the skills, knowledge, and resources that firms under an open innovation model can now benefit from, ensuring long-term advantages such as improved absorptive capacity and organization learning for companies, at the same time increasing the excellence of their goods and facilities;
- (iv)
- Regardless of the ever-increasing product complexity, companies can partner to strive more efficiently, starved of the difficulty and price of producing the whole products internally, thus generating more opportunities for firms located in less-thriving locations and for SMEs in general;
- (v)
- Companies can more successfully compete in new markets and industry segments by combining skills and expertise from different entities across sectors. Thus, they can access specialized resources that they do not already have to stimulate the progress of innovative results.
2. The Open Innovation Evolution: From Conceptualization to the 4.0 Version
Author/s (Year) | Research Object | OI Definition |
---|---|---|
Chesbrough (2005) [3] | Open Innovation: the new imperative for creating and profiting from technology | “A new approach has emerged, which assumes that firms “can and should use external ideas as well as internal ones, and internal and external paths to market” to make the most out of their technologies … valuable ideas can come from inside or outside the company and can go to market from inside or outside the company as well.” |
Gassmann and Enkel (2004) [24] | Towards a theory of Open Innovation: three core process archetypes | “Open innovation means that the company needs to open up its solid boundaries to let valuable knowledge flow in from the outside in order to create opportunities for cooperative innovation processes with partners, customers and/or suppliers. It also includes the exploitation of ideas and IP in order to bring them to market faster than competitors can.” |
West and Gallagher (2006) [26] | Challenges of Open Innovation: the paradox of firm investment in open-source software | “We define open innovation as systematically encouraging and exploring a wide range of internal and external sources for innovation opportunities, consciously integrating that exploration with firm capabilities and resources, and broadly exploiting those opportunities through multiple channels.” |
Chesbrough, Vanhaverbeke and West (2006) [34] | Open Innovation: Researching a New Paradigm | “Open innovation is the use of purposive inflows and outflows of knowledge to accelerate internal innovation, and expand the markets for external use of innovation, respectively. [This paradigm] assumes that firms can and should use external ideas as well as internal ideas, and internal and external paths to market, as they look to advance their technology.” |
Laursen and Salter (2006) [35] | Open for innovation: the role of openness in explaining innovative performance among UK manufacturing firms | “An open innovation model is using a wide range of external actors and sources to help them achieve and sustain innovation” |
Dittrich and Duysters (2007) [36] | Networking as a Means to Strategy Change: The Case of Open Innovation in Mobile Telephony | “The system is referred to as open because the boundaries of the product development funnel are permeable. Some ideas from innovation projects are initiated by other parties before entering the internal funnel; other projects leave the funnel and are further developed by other parties.” |
Hafkesbrink and Schroll (2011) [27] | Innovation 3.0: a new paradigm for multi-actor learning via embedding into knowledge communities | “The notion of “embeddedness” is introduced to mark the increasing challenge of substantially integrating firms into their surrounding communities to assure the absorption of their exploitable knowledge. […] In this context, Innovation 3.0 goes beyond OI (“Innovation 2.0”) and clearly beyond Closed Innovation (“Innovation 1.0”).” |
Lichtenthaler (2011) [11] | Open Innovation: past research, current debates, and future directions | “Open innovation is defined as systematically performing knowledge exploration, retention, and exploitation inside and outside an organization’s boundaries throughout the innovation process.” |
Chesbrough and Bogers (2014) [37] | Explicating Open Innovation: Clarifying an Emerging Paradigm for Understanding Innovation | “We define open innovation as a distributed innovation process based on purposively managed knowledge flows across organizational boundaries, using pecuniary and nonpecuniary mechanisms in line with the organization’s business model.” |
Lopez-Berzosa and Gawer (2014) [38] | Innovation Policy within Private Collectives: Evidence on 3GPP’s Regulation Mechanisms to Facilitate Collective Innovation | “In these increasingly common settings, the nature of the organizational challenge is to innovate together and preserve the collective welfare as defined by the overall vibrancy or performance of the ecosystem, while at the same time preserving or enhancing the individual performance of ecosystem members in competitive markets.” |
Bogers et al. (2016) [39] | The Open Innovation research landscape: established perspectives and emerging themes across different levels of analysis | “We propose a broad framework that combines the insights from earlier research with the prevailing relationships between the most important variables. Our integrative framework allows comparing, contrasting, and integrating the different perspectives at different levels of analysis, while offering a basis for further elaborating on and validating the categories within the framework as well as the boundaries in between.” |
Lopes, Scavarda, Hofmeiter, et al. (2016) [40] | An analysis of the interplay between organizational sustainability, knowledge management, and Open Innovation | “The manufacturer exists between suppliers and customers but, in terms of OI, collaboration with suppliers or customers can prove to be crucial for business. With the help of external knowledge, a firm can improve its sustainable innovation and positively influence organizational sustainability.” |
Chesbrough and Vanhaverbeke (2018) [41] | Open Innovation and Public Policy in the EU with Implications for SMEs | “Accordingly, the importance of OI and the acknowledgment that capable and intelligent minds exist outside of the firm has captured the attention of a large number of companies, venture capitalists, and governments around the globe who have subsequently provided additional funding opportunities.” |
Alassaf, Dabić, Shifrer, et al. (2020) [8] | The impact of open-border organization culture and employees’ knowledge, attitudes, and rewards with regards to Open Innovation: an empirical study | “The expansion of available open innovation funding enabled companies to rethink the ways in which ideas are generated, fully embracing the era of OI.” |
Costa, Matias (2020) [42] | Open Innovation 4.0 as an Enhancer of Sustainable Innovation Ecosystems | “Developing open innovation strategies means combining knowledge, human and financial resources, and all players in the collaborative ecosystem. The promotion of sustainable innovation ecosystems is a co-creative process in which players must contribute and benefit from knowledge creation relying upon absorptive capacities and improvements”. |
Roh, Lee, Ji Yang (2021) [29] | Open Green Innovation | “Green innovation provides a valuable and irreplaceable resource for companies to develop their capabilities and lead to better business outcomes. […] For companies, managers should regard open innovation activities as a window of opportunity to understand, absorb, and learn about complementary knowledge on green innovation from partners”. |
Lee, Roh (2023) [31] | Open Innovation as strategy to mediate between digitalization capabilities and sustainable performance | “Outbound open innovation is an antecedent factor that managers should consider before implementing open innovation […] to leverage the key elements needed to pursue sustainability over time”. |
3. The Open Innovation Paradigm Evolution and Its Application to the Construction Sector
4. The Challenge of Open Innovation Test Beds (OITBs)
The Ongoing Open Innovation Ecosystems for the Construction Sector in the EU
5. Discussion
6. Conclusions and Future Directions
Funding
Data Availability Statement
Conflicts of Interest
References
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Source Title | Number of Publications | Percentage of Total |
---|---|---|
Journal of Open Innovation: Technology, Market, and Complexity | 393 | 5.5% |
Sustainability (Switzerland) | 166 | 2.3% |
International Journal of Innovation Management | 128 | 1.8% |
Technological Forecasting and Social Change | 107 | 1.5% |
Lecture Notes in Computer Science | 91 | 1.3% |
R&D Management | 86 | 1.2% |
Research Policy | 76 | 1.1% |
Research Technology Management | 72 | 1.0% |
Technovation | 72 | 1.0% |
European Journal of Innovation Management | 69 | 1.0% |
Subject Area | Number of Publications |
---|---|
Business, Management and Accounting | 2453 |
Computer Science | 1912 |
Engineering | 1403 |
Social Sciences | 1117 |
Decision Sciences | 798 |
Project Title | Acronym | Program | Period | Consortium Countries |
---|---|---|---|---|
Building an Ecosystem for the up-scaling of lightweight multi-functional concrete and ceramic materials and structures [66]. | LightCoce | Horizon 2020 | 2019–2023 | BE; DE; EL; ES; IT; NL; PL; PT; SE |
METAclustering for cross-sectoral and cross-border innovation ecosystem BUILDING for the European Construction, Additive Manufacturing and Nature-Based Solutions industrial sectors’ SMEs [67]. | METABUILDING | Horizon 2020 | 2020–2023 | AT; BE; DE; ES; FR; HU; IT; PT; TR; UK |
Functional and advanced insulating and energy harvesting/storage materials across climate-adaptive building envelopes [68]. | Iclimabuilt | Horizon 2020 | 2021–2025 | BE; CH; CY; DE; DK; EE; EL; ES; FR; IT; NO; PL; PT; SE; UK |
Measuring Envelope products and systems contributing to the next generation of healthy nearly Zero Energy Buildings [69]. | MEZeroE | Horizon 2020 | 2021–2026 | AT; CH; DE; DK; ES; FR; IT; PL; SI; UK |
An Open Innovation Ecosystem for exploitation of materials for building envelopes towards zero energy buildings [70]. | Exploit4InnoMat | Horizon Europe | 2023–2026 | BE; CY; DE; EL; ES; IE; IT; LT; NO; RO; SE; TR |
Keywords | Objectives | |
---|---|---|
LightCoce | SMEs, lightweight multi-functional concrete and ceramic materials and structures | The objectives can be clustered into three groups related to the ecosystem: (i) setup, (ii) operation and sustainability, and (iii) validation. The LightCoce ecosystem supports the upscaling activities of EU SMEs and industries of lightweight multi-functional concrete and ceramic construction materials and structures. |
METABUILDING | Metaclustering, SMEs, innovation networks ecosystem, digital platform | METABUILDING project has four main goals, listed as follows: provide support to SME innovation and strengthen the competitiveness of SMEs through international collaboration; support SMEs to overcome the COVID-19 crisis through innovation; cross-sectoral and cross-border collaborations to stimulate the innovation potential of the construction sector; and provide a digital platform to facilitate business and innovation in the construction sector. |
Iclimabuilt | Materials development, cross-domain business ecosystem | There are 24 listed objectives of the project, which are clustered per 3 main phases of the ecosystem, like LightCoce. The key goals can be summarized as following: definition of nine Pilot Lines (PLs) for the ecosystem; validation of the OITB by a dedicated workflow on seven test cases, set up a (non-profit) joint venture to administer the ecosystem and provide links with financing schemes for SMEs to increase financial capabilities |
MEZeroE | innovative construction products, envelope solutions, nearly zero-energy buildings; virtual marketplace | The objectives of the MEZeroE project can be categorized into two main groups: (i) related to OITB service validation, (ii) related to the long-term sustainability of the MEZeroE OITB. The final aim is to create a virtual marketplace ecosystem open to promoting cross-fertilization among stakeholders in the construction industry. The ecosystem offers modeling, testing, and monitoring services for nZEB (near-zero energy building), enabling envelope technology solutions (nEES), as well as specialized training. |
Exploit4InnoMat | Material-based solutions, smart envelope systems, sustainable materials and products | The OITB Exploit4InnoMat network for building envelopes will focus on roofs and facades, with a range of materials such as: nano-enabled cement, non-cement premixes and ceramics, advanced coatings and glazing solutions loaded with aerogel, fibers, PCMs, and other nanomaterials. The final aim is to enable the replication of prototypes in different buildings while taking into consideration the trade-offs between the three sustainability pillars, the life cycle stages, and their impacts. Additionally, a tool combining BIM analysis, fast-track modeling, and simulation will enable a digital tool for utilizing building blocks to create a harmonized and aesthetically pleasing urban environment. |
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Salvalai, G.; Sesana, M.M.; Dell’Oro, P.; Brutti, D. Open Innovation for the Construction Sector: Concept Overview and Test Bed Development to Boost Energy-Efficient Solutions. Energies 2023, 16, 5522. https://doi.org/10.3390/en16145522
Salvalai G, Sesana MM, Dell’Oro P, Brutti D. Open Innovation for the Construction Sector: Concept Overview and Test Bed Development to Boost Energy-Efficient Solutions. Energies. 2023; 16(14):5522. https://doi.org/10.3390/en16145522
Chicago/Turabian StyleSalvalai, Graziano, Marta Maria Sesana, Paolo Dell’Oro, and Diletta Brutti. 2023. "Open Innovation for the Construction Sector: Concept Overview and Test Bed Development to Boost Energy-Efficient Solutions" Energies 16, no. 14: 5522. https://doi.org/10.3390/en16145522
APA StyleSalvalai, G., Sesana, M. M., Dell’Oro, P., & Brutti, D. (2023). Open Innovation for the Construction Sector: Concept Overview and Test Bed Development to Boost Energy-Efficient Solutions. Energies, 16(14), 5522. https://doi.org/10.3390/en16145522