
Cardiff Capital Region Board
Cardiff Capital Region Board
2 Projects, page 1 of 1
assignment_turned_in Project2015 - 2017Partners:West of England LEP, Airbus Group Limited (UK), Balfour Beatty (United Kingdom), West of England Local Enterprise Partnership (United Kingdom), Knowle West Media Centre +35 partnersWest of England LEP,Airbus Group Limited (UK),Balfour Beatty (United Kingdom),West of England Local Enterprise Partnership (United Kingdom),Knowle West Media Centre,Dyson Appliances Ltd,Schumacher Institute,Future Cities Catapult,COSTAIN LTD,Airbus (United Kingdom),EADS Airbus,BALFOUR BEATTY RAIL,Motor Design Ltd,Cardiff Capital Region Board,Bristol and Bath Science Park,3D Systems Inc,Dyson Limited,Motor Design Ltd,Bristol City Council,Cardiff Capital Region Board,Frazer-Nash Consultancy Ltd,Cardiff Council,Knowle West Media Centre,3D Systems Inc,RepRap Professional Ltd (RepRapPro),Bristol City Council,University of Bristol,Cardiff Council,Low Carbon South West,DNV GL (UK),FRAZER-NASH CONSULTANCY LTD,Schumacher Institute,Low Carbon South West,University of Bristol,Costain Ltd,Future Cities Catapult,RepRap Professional Limited,BBSP,DNV GL (UK),BALFOUR BEATTY PLCFunder: UK Research and Innovation Project Code: EP/M01777X/1Funder Contribution: 491,658 GBPThe world's manufacturing economy has been transformed by the phenomenon of globalisation, with benefits for economies of scale, operational flexibility, risk sharing and access to new markets. It has been at the cost of a loss of manufacturing and other jobs in western economies, loss of core capabilities and increased risks of disruption in the highly interconnected and interdependent global systems. The resource demands and environmental impacts of globalisation have also led to a loss of sustainability. New highly adaptable manufacturing processes and techniques capable of operating at small scales may allow a rebalancing of the manufacturing economy. They offer the possibility of a new understanding of where and how design, manufacture and services should be carried out to achieve the most appropriate mix of capability and employment possibilities in our economies but also to minimise environmental costs, to improve product specialisation to markets and to ensure resilience of provision under natural and socio-political disruption. This proposal brings together an interdisciplinary academic team to work with industry and local communities to explore the impact of this re-distribution of manufacturing (RDM) at the scale of the city and its hinterland, using Bristol as an example in its European Green Capital year, and concentrating on the issues of resilience and sustainability. The aim of this exploration will be to develop a vision, roadmap and research agenda for the implications of RDM for the city, and at the same time develop a methodology for networked collaboration between the many stakeholders that will allow deep understanding of the issues to be achieved and new approaches to their resolution explored. The network will study the issues from a number of disciplinary perspectives, bringing together experts in manufacturing, design, logistics, operations management, infrastructure, resilience, sustainability, engineering systems, geographical sciences, mathematical modelling and beyond. They will consider how RDM may contribute to the resilience and sustainability of a city in a number of ways: firstly, how can we characterise the economic, social and environmental challenges that we face in the city for which RDM may contribute to a solution? Secondly, what are the technical developments, for example in manufacturing equipment and digital technologies, that are enablers for RDM, and what are their implications for a range of manufacturing applications and for the design of products and systems? Thirdly, what are the social and political developments, for example in public policy, in regulation, in the rise of social enterprise or environmentalism that impact on RDM and what are their implications? Fourthly, what are the business implications, on supply networks and logistics arrangements, of the re-distribution? Finally, what are the implications for the physical and digital infrastructure of the city? In addition, the network will, through the way in which it carries out embedded focused studies, explore mechanisms by which interdisciplinary teams may come together to address societal grand challenges and develop research agendas for their solution. These will be based on working together using a combination of a Collaboratory - a centre without walls - and a Living Lab - a gathering of public-private partnerships in which businesses, researchers, authorities, and citizens work together for the creation of new services, business ideas, markets, and technologies.
more_vert assignment_turned_in Project2022 - 2027Partners:FundApps Ltd, #joiningthedots, FinTech West, Admiral Group Plc, JP Morgan Chase +55 partnersFundApps Ltd,#joiningthedots,FinTech West,Admiral Group Plc,JP Morgan Chase,Northumberland Community Bank,FinTech West,Open Banking Excellence (OBE) Limited,Center Res Adv. Financial Technologies,Aster Foundation,ThoughtWorks Ltd,Digital Poverty Alliance,Mastercard,Beyond Reach Consulting Ltd,SIMBA Chain (UK),Atom Bank plc,Atom Bank plc,FinTech North,Dynamo Northeast,The Inclusion Foundation,Northumberland Community Bank,University of Birmingham,IBM (United States),Aster Foundation,Incuto Ltd,Fin Tech Scotland,Fin Tech Scotland,Open Banking Excellence (OBE) Limited,SuperTech West Midlands,#joiningthedots,WorldLine,J.P. Morgan (UK),WhiteCap Consulting Ltd,J.P. Morgan,Gainwell Technologies,WhiteCap Consulting Ltd,Gainwell Technologies,FinTech North,IBM UNITED KINGDOM LIMITED,The Inclusion Foundation,IBM (United Kingdom),Admiral Group Plc,Digital Poverty Alliance,ThoughtWorks Ltd,Dynamo Northeast,SuperTech West Midlands,Cardiff Capital Region Board,GAIN: Group Autism, Insurance, Neurodiv,FundApps Ltd,Incuto Ltd,Cardiff Capital Region Board,IBM (United Kingdom),Sage (UK) Ltd,SIMBA Chain International,Mastercard,Beyond Reach Consulting Ltd,WorldLine,GAIN: Group Autism, Insurance, Neurodiv,University of Birmingham,Sage (UK) LtdFunder: UK Research and Innovation Project Code: EP/W034042/1Funder Contribution: 2,044,220 GBPThe ACORN network's mission is to bridge the gap that currently exists between the research in universities and the need of the financial services industry, its consumers and the regulator. ACORN wants to grow to well over 100 primary partners and 1000 associated partners, offering an inclusive, diverse and responsible research culture. Based on regional presence in Wales, Scotland, North-East England and London, it will harmonize technological know-how across regions and connect regional partners to nation-wide efforts. Real-life challenges in financial services are complex, combining responding to technology innovation with business ethics, green/environmental considerations and scarcity in the talent pipeline. This presents FS with wicked problems, which the industry cannot ignore, and which require people and researchers from across disciplines to come together. ACORN aims to address wicked problems in FS that are associated with innovation in technology, mathematics and sciences. ACORN provides a number of mechanisms to succeed in this mission. Central to ACORN's working is its 'commissioning framework', which provides the funding mechanisms for five types of collaborative projects between academia and partners. ACORN offers seed project funding, which aims to explore technological, mathematical and scientific solutions for real-life challenges in FS, prioritised through co-design sandpits. It then offers funding for larger multi-disciplinary feasibility projects, which may build on the seed projects, and expand to consider 'wicked' multi-disciplinary research problems. In parallel, ACORN offers funding for agile projects, which can be of any type, e.g., horizon scanning, population survey, a software prototype or a machine learning application. These have predetermined IP arrangements, so that they can be organised in agile manner and can start at any time for the duration of ACORN. Additionally, impact projects are offered to take any of the research projects further (e.g., to influence policy makers, or initiate commercialisation), and education/engagement projects allow to grow the FS talent pool and address the talent pipeline. To support researchers and partners in these project, ACORN establishes a number of services the community can use. The co-design service and the corporate digital responsibility service help researchers to consider these aspects in their proposals. The secure data vault, the shared code base, the experimentation sandbox and template IP arrangements are available to improve research, its impact and to lower collaboration barriers. We name the network ACORN, to signify that collaborations as majestic as an oak tree can grow from humble beginnings.
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