AI-Generated Summary
Forum Virium Helsinki is the City of Helsinki's innovation company, dedicated to developing Helsinki into the world's most functional smart city through practical experimentation and citizen-centred design. Wholly owned by the City of Helsinki, Forum Virium operates at the intersection of municipal government, technology companies, research institutions, and citizens, creating the conditions for urban innovation to flourish.
The organisation is best known for its living lab methodology, which creates real-world testing environments where new technologies and services can be piloted with actual residents before wider deployment. The Smart Kalasatama district is Forum Virium's flagship project, demonstrating how an entire urban neighbourhood can serve as a platform for innovation, with over 100 experiments conducted in areas including smart energy, autonomous mobility, digital health, and community platforms.
Forum Virium's approach emphasises open data as a foundation for urban innovation. The organisation has been instrumental in developing Helsinki's open data platform, making municipal datasets freely available to entrepreneurs, researchers, and app developers. This commitment to data openness has positioned Helsinki as a European leader in open data maturity and enabled a thriving ecosystem of civic technology applications.
Beyond individual projects, Forum Virium builds systematic innovation capacity for the city, developing procurement frameworks that enable the city to engage with startups, designing participatory processes that give citizens a meaningful role in shaping urban services, and creating knowledge-sharing networks with partner cities across Europe. The organisation's international partnerships include active roles in major EU-funded smart city projects, contributing Helsinki's practical innovation experience while learning from urban experiments elsewhere. Forum Virium's model of a publicly owned innovation company has itself become an export, with cities worldwide studying how to replicate Helsinki's approach.
