New Straits Times

Keeping the DIY culture alive

KakiDIY and The School by Jaya One have come together to provide a hub to inspire the younger generation on upcycling and DIY,

- writes Zuliantie Dzul nor.zuliantie@nst.com.my

“WHAT’S in that box?” I ask my father, pointing to a medium-sized green and stripy rectangula­r box under the bunk bed. We’re in the midst of our family’s annual spring cleaning activity at our home in Banting, Selangor.

It’s a little crowded in the attic with my parents, two brothers and I seated in the tiny space surrounded by boxes of things we’ve been storing (or more accurately, hoarding) over the years.

“Must be your stuff again-lah,” he insinuates, thrusting the box in my hands.

It looks like half of the boxes in this room belong to me. So far, I’ve uncovered piles of yellowing lecture notes and old assignment­s from my university days. And then there are also boxes filled with my notebooks and magazines.

He’s probably right, I think to myself as I tear open the dusty box that’s been stored here for God-knows-how-long.

Nestled inside is my collection of cassette tapes going way back to my teenage years. Finding my Eminem’s Marshall Mathers LP released 17 years ago and Backstreet Boys’

Millenium album inside, I try not to cringe at my taste in music — or lack of it.

“So do you want to keep, throw or sell?” my father asks me impatientl­y. The hoarder in me begs him to hold on to my things for just a while longer.

Now that took place a couple of months ago. As I’m standing here at Level 1 of The School at Jaya One in Petaling Jaya, I’m reminded of my outdated music collection as I peer into a tall glass cabinet in front of me. Inside sits a square container made out of glued-together cassette tapes. “Not a bad idea!” I think to myself.

There’s another square container made out of floppy disks (the thumbdrive of my generation!) and a coin box crafted using empty air fresheners.

A Stormtroop­er helmet and a lightsabre made popular by the Star Wars franchise are displayed on top of the cabinet. Upon closer inspection, I discover they’re actually made using everyday items such as cardboard and PVC pipes!

These ingenious innovation­s are the products of KakiDIY, a community of DIY enthusiast­s, makers, innovators and entreprene­urs who have created a platform to share, collaborat­e and provide services to others.

Today, KakiDIY is taking another step in reaching out to the community, specifical­ly

to the younger generation through its MakerLAB.

With the launch of MakerLAB, an upcycling maker-space that encourages learning, creation, innovation and invention using available resources, KakiDIY hopes to encourage the culture of creating, upcycling and recycling by offering creative classes,

and sharing spaces, tools and ideas with the community at large.

The well-lit space is spacious complete with worktops while the workshop area is furnished with electronic tools, handheld power tools and 3D printers.

THE COLLABORAT­ION

MakerLAB is The School’s maiden effort at developing its enrichment offering for children and youth.

Today, I’m meeting with the two key people behind this project — Johnson Lam, the founder of KakiDIY and Charles Wong, the executive director of Tetap Tiara, developer of The School.

“I fell in love with what KakiDIY was doing,” begins Wong, when we meet at The School.

As an entreprene­ur, Wong always goes back to the basic philosophy of this first enrichment mall in the country, which aims to empower youth and children to be critical thinkers and well-rounded members of society. KakiDIY’s portfolio, he points out, happens to share the same values.

“I was at the Penang Mini Maker Faire and felt that The School could play a role in the makers’ movement. That’s when I met Lam. We decided to combine our resources together and create this project,” explains Wong of the background to the collaborat­ion.

The upcycling and DIY culture in this country is still rather small, adds Lam.

“The three main excuses when it comes to DIY, repairs and making

things are ‘no space’, ‘no tools’ and ‘no experience’.”

MakerLAB, he says, is the solution for those excuses. In the coming months, a succession of educationa­l and extracurri­cular providers will come on board to provide youths with the avenue to explore and learn.

Following the latest trend of VR/AR, 3D printing and drones, makers are able to organise classes and workshops on a wide range of subjects including arts and craft, STEM (science, technology, engineerin­g and mathematic­s), coding, electronic­s, sewing and 3D printing, to name a few.

SUSTAINING ECO-SYSTEM

KakiDIY was establishe­d about three years ago and has now garnered more than 20,000 followers on Facebook.

Lam first started out by sharing DIY informatio­n and articles on online forums, which received positive feedback.

However over the years, the forum trend slowly died out and he lost many of his articles posted online.

“I knew I had to do something because I didn’t want the DIY culture to die. That’s why I created a movement and registered KakiDIY so I could once again post all my articles there in one place.”

Interestin­gly, the word “kaki” comes from the Malay slang which means gang or a group of enthusiast­s.

“I speak Hokkien and in Hokkien, kaki lai means do-it-yourself!” explains the bespectacl­ed Lam, with a grin.

With the setting up of MakerLAB, Lam hopes people will utilise this space and at the same time, sustain the eco-system for other entreprene­urs here in the mall.

“For example, people can bring their broken toys to MakerLAB and learn how to fix them. After which these toys can be donated to needy non-government­al organisati­ons like Parents without Partners (an organisati­on that supports single parents living in poverty) who can then sell these items to raise funds,” explains Lam.

Pointing to the 3D printers at the workshop area, Lam tells me that he hopes to work closely with cafes as well.

“We can create boxes using these printers for cafes to pack their food items in, like cookies. What’s more, we can even print out cookie cutters too!”

My gaze rests on a green and red square with curved edges that looks like a huge block of Lego with what appears to be propellers complete with a tiny camera attached in the centre.

“This is a 3D-printed micro-drone box,” explains Lam as he follows my gaze. Creating gadgets like the drone is also one of his DIY hobbies, he confides

MOVING FORWARD

A Computer Science graduate from Universiti Sains Malaysia, Lam’s passion for DIY started from childhood. He attributes his knack for making things to his late grandmothe­r who hailed from a small village in Batu Kurau near Taiping, Perak.

“During the Japanese Occupation, my grandmothe­r, a single mother of nine, had to flee with her children to the jungle with nothing but the clothes they were wearing. She built a shack for them to take shelter from the elements and from the wild animals. She planted her own crops and even sold kuih at the nearby village for extra income,” recalls Lam, adding that his grandmothe­r also built an oven using zinc panels.

She passed away when Lam was 23, leaving a legacy of creativity and innovation that he tried to emulate.

Recalling his first DIY project, the 37-year-old recalls: “I modified a light bulb when I was around 8. I took the bulb from a flashlight, connected it to a battery and tied it to my bicycle wheel. So whenever I cycled, the circuit would spark a light. Using the same concept, I also added a brake light for that bike.”

Do you still have the bike? I ask. He replies, grinning: “I still have the frame. I’m going to modify it into something else.”

Unlike Lam, Wong admits that the most DIY thing he can do is change a light bulb!

“I think my passion lies in entreprene­urship. I like bringing communitie­s together and being that bridge,” he adds, chuckling.

Moving forward, The School and KakiDIY will be spearheadi­ng the second phase of their collaborat­ion — to build an Environmen­tal Control Lab in the coming months for the greater purpose of saving Mother Nature.

Concluding, Lam says earnestly: “KakiDIY is still growing. I’m working hard to do more. Nothing makes me happier than accomplish­ing something, no matter how small. I’m also happy if I get to inspire and encourage others to do the same thing. It’s easy to make people say ‘oh you’re doing a great job’. But to make them learn it themselves, share with others and lead by example... that’s the real goal.”

As soon as I leave the place, I whip out my phone and text my father: “Dad, I need my cassette tapes. I know what to do with them now.”

 ??  ?? Some of the DIY items produced by KakiDIY.
Some of the DIY items produced by KakiDIY.
 ??  ??
 ??  ?? DIY Star Wars workshop.
DIY Star Wars workshop.
 ??  ?? DIY workshop.
DIY workshop.
 ??  ?? 3D Printers.
3D Printers.
 ??  ?? Johnson Lam (left) and Charles Wong.
Johnson Lam (left) and Charles Wong.

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