LoCloud logo

Local content in a Europeana cloud (LoCloud)
International project

Project description

LoCloud is a Best Practice Network of 31 partners, co-funded under the CIP ICT-PSP Programme of the European Commission. Its overall goal is to add to over 4 million digital resources from European cultural institutions to Europeana. Europeana is an on-line portal providing access to millions of digitised materials from European museums, libraries, archives and multimedia collections. LoCloud started on 1 March 2013 and will run for three years.

The project builds on the achievements of two past Best Practice Networks: 

  • CARARE (2010-2013), which supported Europe's network of heritage agencies and organisations, archaeological museums and research institutions and specialist digital archives in making the digital content for the archaeology and architectural heritage; 
  • EuropeanaLocal (2008-2011) whose collaboration with local institutions and their regional and national aggregators resulted in the contribution of nearly five million digital items to Europeana.

There are two main aspects in LoCloud's work:

  • the exploration of the  potential  of  cloud  computing technologies  for enhancing Europeana, working on the development of a cloud infrastructure (IaaS) and on the creation of software services (SaaS) aimed to benefit content providers and users;
  • a specific focus on small and medium sized institutions, whose digital collections are still under-represented in Europeana.

In particular, LoCloud aims to facilitate the role of small and medium-sized institutions by:

  • Supporting them in making their content and metadata  available  to  Europeana, by using the cloud to provide services and tools which help to reduce technical, semantic and skills barriers.
  • Making available cloud-based software  services  which  enable  them  to  render  their content more discoverable and interoperable;
  • Enabling smaller institution types such as house museums, which currently fall outside most aggregation infrastructures, to contribute their content to Europeana.
  • Exploring the potential of cloud computing for aggregation, enrichment and re-use, with a special focus on geographic location.
  • Exploring and trial a cloud based architecture as a scalable platform for Europeana metadata aggregation and harvesting with higher efficiency and reduced maintenance costs.
  • Provide guidance,   training   and   support  facilities to serve the needs of content providers.

The consortium of LoCloud includes:

  • a strong group of technical partners
  • national and regional aggregation services or content providers who will both provide new content and act as pilot implementers of the cloud services.
  • a number of partners acting as content providers representing specific content domains (such as ‘house museums’, specialised museums, public libraries and local archives).
  • a group of partners with specific expertise in key aspects (e.g. vocabularies).

LoCloud is coordinated by Riksarkivet (National Archives of Norway).

Project duration

The project was launched on the 1st of March, 2014  and will run for 36 months ending on the 29th of February, 2016

Lithuanian team in the project

  • Ingrida Vosyliūtė, Department of Museology (project manager)
  • Dr. Rimvydas Laužikas, Department of Museology (research team leader)
  • Dr. Vykintas Vaitkevičius, Department of Museology
  • Mantas Bardas, Integrated Information Centre
  • Šarūnė Balandytė, Integrated Information Centre

More about the project: www.locloud.eu

 ambrosia

Project description

Europeana Food and Drink is a project funded by the European Commission under the CIP ICT Policy Support Programme (ICT PSP) that aims at promoting the wider re-use of the digital resources available through Europeana. Focusing on the rich and vibrant European food and drink culture and heritage, Europeana Food and Drink wishes to engage the general public, creative industries, cultural heritage organisations and the food and drink industries in creating, sharing, learning and making use of food- and drink related content.

The project brings together 28 partners from across 16 European countries and is led by the UK-based Collections Trust. Leading content providers, creative technologists and creative industry partners are working together in order to create an evocative suite of commercial applications and products featuring food- and drink related content catered to specific audiences.

Europeana Food and Drink will achieve its objectives by:

  • Discovering, preparing, licensing and uploading 50,000 – 70,000 unique high-quality digital assets and their associated metadata to Europeana
  • Engaging the general public, retailers and distributors in campaigns and in piloting and crowding activities to encourage them to share and make use of food- and drink related content
  • Working with creative industry partners to develop a suite of innovative creative and commercial applications
  • Enhancing unique ideas via Open Innovation Challenges and extending the Europeana Open Labs network
  • Developing and sharing new knowledge, understanding and guidance on successful public/private partnerships focused on digital cultural content.

Our role in the project

Vilnius University Faculty of Communication is participating in the project as a Culture Sector partner. The Faculty will provide digital content related to the Lithuanian food culture, national food and beverage production traditions, dinning customs, as well as most characteristic recipes that represents the region. Our team will also work with Creative Industry partners in the development of commercial applications and participation in the ‘Learning Track’ to review the effectiveness, viability and impact of different models of delivery and revenue-sharing. In addition to securing the participation of Lithuanian organisations in the project, the Faculty will contribute to the modelling of end-user requirements and behaviours, based on their experienced in previous projects.

Project duration

  • The project was launched on the 1st of January, 2014  and will run for 30 months ending on the 30th of June, 2016

Lithuanian team in the project

  • Ingrida Vosyliūtė, Department of Museology (project manager)
  • Dr. Rimvydas Laužikas, Department of Museology (research team leader)
  • Dr. Vykintas Vaitkevičius, Department of Museology
  • Mantas Daubaras, Department of Museology
  • Mindaugas Kelpša, Department of Museology

National partners

  • Vilnius University Library
  • UAB “Dizi”

More about the project