Albuquerque Journal

SF incubator, startup partner open digital fab lab

- Kevin Robinson-Avila

With today’s revolution in digital manufactur­ing sweeping through industry, the Santa Fe Business Incubator is stepping up to train “new collar” workers in 21st century fabricatio­n.

The incubator’s new Archimedes Fab Lab, which opened in November, offers a full suite of digital, advanced manufactur­ing tools that incubator companies can now use for rapid product developmen­t. And, through a new partnershi­p with Santa Fe startup Fab Lab Hub LLC, technician­s and operators can get the hands-on training they need to transition from traditiona­l blue-collar jobs to today’s new-collar work in modern factories.

“People are scared of robots taking over the workplace,” said Fab Lab Hub founder Sarah Boisvert. “But robots are actually opening up a whole line of ‘new collar’ jobs to design, program, monitor and fix them. They’re actually ‘cobots’ that work on the production line with us, but technician­s and operators need training to manage it.”

The incubator’s new, 800-square-foot fab lab is equipped with the modern digital fabricatio­n tools needed to make almost anything, Boisvert said. That includes 3-D printers, vinyl and laser cutters, computer numerical control machines for precise tabletop cutting, milling machines and a microelect­ronics workstatio­n. It’s all tied together with software that allows digital control of the entire manufactur­ing process.

The lab is named in memory of the late Kim Constan tikes, an incubator client whose family donated the equipment from his engineerin­g company, Archimedes Scientific, after he died.

In addition, Boisvert secured donations from a host of manufactur­ing firms to upgrade the lab into a fully-equipped fab lab, allowing it to become a formal affiliate of the internatio­nal Fab Lab Network connected to the Massachuse­tts Institute of Technology. The network now includes more than 1,000 fab labs worldwide, modeled on MIT’s guidelines for the basic tools needed to make almost anything in a digital workplace, Boisvert said.

Boisvert is also working with Santa Fe Community College to open a second network-affiliated fab lab at the Trades and Advanced Technology Center in February.

The Archimedes Fab Lab is now open for use by the incubator’s resident and affiliate companies. Together with the incubator’s Bioscience Laboratory, a 700-square-foot wet lab that opened in 2014, client companies now have access to a broad suite of high-tech tools for rapid product prototypin­g and testing, said incubator President and CEO Marie Longserre.

“The Fab Lab is a huge asset for us,” Longserre said. “It provides cuttingedg­e training and tools.”

The training will be offered by Fab Lab Hub, which Boisvert launched both to help aspiring fab labs nationwide meet the requiremen­ts for MIT affiliatio­n, and to provide education in digital fabricatio­n. The company’s “digital badge program” offers trainings that range from six to 16 weeks or more to achieve various levels of certificat­ion.

“Students and people in manufactur­ing need a new training model,” Boisvert said. “We’re talking about technician­s and operators, not engineers. They don’t need a two-year degree anymore, because the traditiona­l educationa­l path for journeyman machinists has changed.”

The U.S. Department of Labor estimates a shortfall of 2 million skilled workers by 2020.

“Manufactur­ers are desperate for workers trained in digital manufactur­ing,” Boisvert said.

The program will include paid internship­s.

“We had two interns in the fall, and we hope to reach 10 this year,” Boisvert said. “As it grows, we want train the interns to teach other people, as well, in a train-the-trainer model.”

The lab will offer periodic workshops to the public. And, Boisvert’s company will collaborat­e with other entreprene­urship programs, including a new partnershi­p in the works with the Creative Startups accelerato­r and the incubator’s Startup Weekend in February.

“We’ll make the fab lab available and offer a workshop in computer-aided design and 3-D printing for Startup Weekend teams who want to do onthe-spot prototypin­g,” said incubator Program Director Sean O’Shea.

The incubator also recently expanded and upgraded its co-working space, a 400-square-foot office that offers open access not just to members of the incubator, but to affiliates of the Project Y and FatPipe ABQ co-working spaces in Los Alamos and Albuquerqu­e, as well, O’Shea said.

The 30,000-square-foot incubator, which opened in 1997, is celebratin­g its 20th anniversar­y this year. To date, it’s helped launch and grow about 160 businesses, generating more than 1,000 new jobs in Santa Fe in the last 10 years.

“We’re planning a big luncheon celebratio­n in downtown Santa Fe in early April for our anniversar­y,” Longserre said. “That will kick off a variety of activities throughout the year, including workshops, panel discussion­s and public gatherings that focus on current and new programs and collaborat­ive opportunit­ies.”

 ?? COURTESY OF SANTA FE BUSINESS INCUBATOR ?? This CNC machine offers precise tabletop cutting of various materials at Santa Fe Business Incubator’s new digital fab lab.
COURTESY OF SANTA FE BUSINESS INCUBATOR This CNC machine offers precise tabletop cutting of various materials at Santa Fe Business Incubator’s new digital fab lab.
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 ?? COURTESY OF SANTA FE BUSINESS INCUBATOR ?? Santa Fe Business Incubator’s new digital Archimedes Fab Lab opened in November.
COURTESY OF SANTA FE BUSINESS INCUBATOR Santa Fe Business Incubator’s new digital Archimedes Fab Lab opened in November.

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