To celebrate its tenth anniversary, Helsinki Region Infoshare is holding an anniversary webinar on November 11th 2021, setting course on ever more open cities. Open data and open application programming interfaces (APIs) will form an important basis for business enterprise in future.
Launched in spring 2011, the(Link leads to external service)Helsinki Region Infoshare (hri.fi(Link leads to external service)) service brings the public data of cities to everyone’s reach. Speakers at the webinar will recount the first steps of the pioneering service and discuss what the next ten years of open city data may bring.
Although in Finland, information produced by public administration is exceptionally open, it was not all that easy to get hold of for your own use in the early 2000s. With open data, public procurements of cities can now be studied by anyone at home on their couch. Users can download the procurement data of cities, anything between commodity procurements worth a few euros and construction works worth millions.
– Our cities today are building APIs into their data systems to allow the transfer of machine-readable data to other applications. Open APIs make it easier to use the data both within city administrations and in applications created by external actors, says Hami Kekkonen, Project Manager of the HRI service.
As an example, open data on the cities’ public transport is already being extensively used by, for instance, the Whim all-in-one app for mobility and by dozens of other mobile apps built by application developers.
Photo: “Helsinki ennen ja nyt” [Helsinki earlier and now] won
a public vote on the most interesting app built using data obtained via HRI. It
compares Helsinki of a hundred years back as shown on Signe Brander’s photographs with a contemporary Helsinki as shown
by Google’s streetscape videos.
The HRI service – a model for others
In the early 2010s, a global movement for open data started to promote the opening of public data. Finland quickly became a model in terms of open data. An important milestone in the opening of public data was the launching in 2011 of the HRI service by the cities of Helsinki, Espoo, Vantaa and Kauniainen (together forming the Helsinki Metropolitan Area). The service, which provides data free of charge to journalists, app developers, students and other residents, has been an important model for public administration elsewhere in Finland, too.
HRI provides open data ranging from 3D city models to traffic accident statistics. The APIs built in the data systems of the cities have become popular data sources. Through them, machine-readable updated information on, for example, public transport, events and tourism, can be obtained.
Over the years, historical maps and air photos of the cities have been the number-one target of interest of the public. When in spring 2021 the HRI service celebrated its tenth anniversary by announcing a public vote on the most interesting app built using data obtained via HRI, the winner was “Helsinki ennen ja nyt” [Helsinki earlier and now] created by Juuso Lehtinen. The online service compares current streetscapes in Helsinki with what they looked like a hundred years ago. It was built in just one weekend in 2014 by combining old photographs published as open data with Google’s street views.
The keynote speech at the anniversary webinar will be given by Theo Blackwell, Chief Digital Officer at the Great London Authority.
Welcome to
join our anniversary webinar on November 11th from 1 pm to 4.30 pm. See full
programme of the webinar, registration and information via this link(Link leads to external service) (In Finnish). With the exception of Blackwell’s speech, the webinar will be conducted
in Finnish.
Speakers
include, among others: Theo Blackwell,
Chief Digital Officer, Great London Authority, Olli-Pekka
Rissanen, Chief Specialist, Finnish
Ministry of Finance, Juuso Lehtinen,
App Developer, Ohjelma-Lehtinen Oy Ltd, Esa
Mäkinen, Managing Editor, Helsingin Sanomat, Kristo Lehtonen, Director, Fair Data Economy, Sitra, Mikko Rusama, Chief Digital Officer,
City of Helsinki.
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Popular data on HRI
- Helsinki metropolitan postal
code areas(Link leads to external service) - Combined detailed plan map of
the City of Helsinki(Link leads to external service) - District map of the City of
Helsinki(Link leads to external service) - HSL journey planner API(Link leads to external service)
- Helsinki Metropolitan Area
service map APIs(Link leads to external service) - Statistics on deaths in the Helsinki Region by
age and gender(Link leads to external service) - Metropolitan area in districts(Link leads to external service)
- City of Helsinki Procurements(Link leads to external service)
- Traffic data from Helsinki(Link leads to external service)
- Buildings in Helsinki(Link leads to external service)