2013/2014 KAN-CM_A45 CANCELLED -The Beijing-Copenhagen Urban Challenge: Innovating Building-Integrated Designs for Green Energy- CANCELLED
English Title | |
CANCELLED -The Beijing-Copenhagen Urban Challenge: Innovating Building-Integrated Designs for Green Energy- CANCELLED |
Course information |
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Language | English |
Exam ECTS | 15 ECTS |
Type | Elective |
Level | Full Degree Master |
Duration | One Semester |
Course period | Autumn
Changes in course schedule may occur Week 37-39 at CBS Monday Afternoon, Wednesday afternoon and Friday afternoon, week 40-42 in Beijing, Friday afternoon week 43-45 at CBS |
Time Table | Please see course schedule at e-Campus |
Max. participants | 6 |
Study board |
Study Board for MSc in Economics and Business
Administration
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Course coordinator | |
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Lecturers include:
Thomas Howard from Department of Mechanical Engineering, DTU This course forms part of the Green Innovation in Cities program sponsored by CIEL - http://ciel-lab.dk/green-innovation-in-cities/ |
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Main academic disciplines | |
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Last updated on 01-05-2013 |
Learning objectives | |||||||||||||||||||||||
This course aims to provide students
with an opportunity to gain insights based on hands‐on experience
with real‐world projects and apply relevant models, concepts and
theories in order to understand the course topics. The Learning
Objectives for the course specify that at the end of the course the
student should be able to manage competently the following
objectives in the context of innovating urban building-integrated
designs for green energy:
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Course prerequisites | |||||||||||||||||||||||
As only 6 students from each
university can participate, students should email the course
coordinator a max. 3 page application including the student’s:
curriculum, business experience, interdisciplinary and
intercultural skills as well as motivation and personal skills.
A basic knowledge and understanding of innovation, entrepreneurship, marketing, organization, management and sustainability is a good preparation for this course. |
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Examination | |||||||||||||||||||||||
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Course content and structure | |||||||||||||||||||||||
By 2008, more than half of the
world’s population lives in cities and by 2030 it is expected that
more than 5 billion people live in urban settings. Because of scale
and proximity cities, in principle, offer a favorable setting for
the resolution of social and environmental problems The challenge
for the next few decades is learning how to exploit the
possibilities urbanization offers and it becomes increasingly
important that cities become sustainable and provide good living
conditions for its inhabitants. An important part of this process
is to transform the cities to a post-carbon energy supply by
integrating renewable energy elements in suitable ways in the town
structures and surfaces.
The price of solar cell panels has dropped significantly the last few years and as a consequence integrating them in new, as well as in existing, building surfaces is fast becoming an economically viable alternative. However, the challenge is how to integrate the panels in designs that conform to existing and new building structures and surfaces in esthetically satisfactory ways. The same design issue relates to small and medium sized wind mills when integrated in existing and new building structures and surfaces; and the assortment of these types of wind mills is rapidly increasing emphasizing the need to consider the design issue in more detail. The challenges facing businesses and the public sector to develop and market green innovations in the area of innovating urban building-integrated designs for green energy are formidable. A wide range of subjects contribute valuable insights on these challenges. Without effective multi-stakeholder collaboration that involves, for instance, users / citizens and investors suppliers, public sector, business partners, progress is likely to be severely compromised. This course focuses on two areas of collaboration that to date have been largely overlooked despite their importance for green innovation – network collaboration of businesses with the public sector, e.g. public-private partnerships and network collaboration of businesses or the public sector with citizens / users / consumers. Today the public sector shapes the conditions under which many green innovation initiatives unfold through, for example, policies affecting taxation, pricing and procurement. Incentive structures for reducing energy consumption are often relatively weak or totally absent. New solutions that require changes in functionality may require large investments and, as a consequence, it is important to unleash the creative potential of multi-stakeholderpublic-private partnerships by involving them in the design and implementation of new solutions. The course is formed as a Beijing-Copenhagen Urban Challengewhere the participants are Master’s students who will work on innovating building-integrated designs for green energy. See teaching methods below. The academic world has only recently begun to study innovating urban building-integrated designs for green energy from a multi-stakeholder public-private perspective. Consequently, the course will have to borrow theories from a number of other disciplines, e.g., organization, multi-stakeholder management , public-private partnerships, innovation, etc. Key business topics include the following related to innovating urban building-integrated designs for green energy:
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Teaching methods | |||||||||||||||||||||||
The course is formed as a
Beijing-Copenhagen Urban Challenge where the participants are
Master’s students who will work on innovating building-integrated
designs for green energy. 6 teams of 4 students (2 participants
from each city on each team), representing respectively DTU (Danish
University of Technology), CBS (Copenhagen Business School) and a
maximum of two Chinese Universities that will participate in the
challenge. As only 6 students from each university can participate,
students should email the course coordinator a max. 3 page
application including the student’s: curriculum, business
experience, interdisciplinary and intercultural skills as well as
motivation and personal skills.
The teams will work on their challenge for 3 weeks in Copenhagen and 3 weeks in Beijing, respectively followed by a 3-week period theoretically reflecting on the innovation project and a final exam based on a miniproject. The challenge will give students course credit for participation. The university partners from both cities will alternately facilitate the students’ work through general and project specific lectures, workshops, coaching, on-line programs and so forth. The teams will present their final result to a jury through description of the innovation in a business case report and a video presentation. One overall winner of the competition will be elected with special mentions given to the innovation performance, teamwork, best pitch, video, etc. The winning team will be offered a business case implementation internship enabling them to continue their work with a business partner involved in the challenge. Based on the group project results in the urban challenge the students in the period after the presentation develop a miniproject that reflect theoretically on the project content and results. The miniproject will form the basis for an individual oral exam |
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Expected literature | |||||||||||||||||||||||
Wiehe, G (2010), “Towards a process perspective on public-private partnerships” in Hodge, G.A., Greve, C. and Boardman, A. (Eds) International Handbook in Public-Private Partnerships, Edward Elgar, UK, pp510-526 Foley, H.C., Freihaut, J., Hallacher, P. & Knapp, C. (2011). „The Greater Philadelphia Innovation Cluster for Energy-Efficient Buildings: A New Model for Public-Private Partnerships”. Industrial Research Institute, November-December, pp.42-48. Hall, A. (2006). “Public – private sector partnerships in an agricultural system of innovation: concepts and challenges”. International Journal of Technology Management and Sustainable Development, 5(1), pp.3-20 Parker, B., Segev, S. and Pinto, J. (2010), “What it means to go green: Consumer perceptions of green brands and dimensions and "greenness," American Academy of Advertising Conference Proceedings, pp. 99-111. Bagozzi, R.P. and Lee, K.H. (1999), “Consumer resistance to, and acceptance of, innovations,” Advances in Consumer Research, Vol. 26, pp. 218-225. Braungart, M., McDonough, W. and Bollinger, A. (2007). “Cradle-to-cradle design: Creating healthy emissions – a strategy for eco-effective product and system design,” Journal of Cleaner Production, Vol.15, pp.1337-1348. Janssen, K.L. and Dankbaar, B. (2008), “Proactive involvement of consumers in innovation,” International Journal of Innovation Management,Vol. 12, No. 3, pp. 511–541. Jansson, J., Marell, A. and Nordlund, A. (2010), “Green consumer behavior: Determinants of curtailment and eco-innovation adoption,” Journal of Consumer Marketing, Vol. 2, No. 4, pp. 358–370. |
Last updated on
01-05-2013