Calgary Herald

Makers meet to tinker

Community-based workshops gain a following

- GEORDON OMAND

HALIFAX — A fan whirrs noisily in the small, second-storey room of a downtown Halifax office tower as Dan Friesen turns on the homemade spot welder he has brought along for show-and-tell.

He points out to an attentive crowd the various components of his device, from an everyday wall switch to a battery cable transforme­r.

Friesen gestures toward the contraptio­n’s power cord, borrowed from a microwave oven.

“Yeah, just kind of ordinary parts around my house,” says Friesen, flipping on the device’s microswitc­h, which is embedded in a hockey puck.

Sparks crackle as the arms clamp down on two round overlappin­g metal disks.

“You can see it’s getting red hot there,” says Friesen, as a small dot on the metal begins to glow.

“And there you have it,” he says, seconds later, turning off the machine and fingering the nowjoined metal pieces.

Friesen is one of several people who have shown up at the Halifax Makerspace’s open house night earlier this month to find out more about the startup group.

“I’m a maker. I like to make things,” he says. “And I thought it might be interestin­g to talk with other people who like to make things as well.”

Jay Strum, a 16-year-old high school student, is also at the meeting.

“I love tearing things apart and rebuilding them,” says Strum.

“I like just tinkering with stuff, seeing how things work and getting an idea of how to modify them and get them to do other things.”

Though the Halifax Makerspace is still relatively young, this do-ityourself-oriented studio is actually part of a much larger movement which has been spreading across North America over the past eight years.

As community-operated workshops, hackerspac­es — also known as makerspace­s, hackspaces or hacklabs — are places where like-minded, curiosityd­riven tinkerers gather to share resources and expertise.

These collaborat­ive workshops are founded on the do-it-yourself culture and typically centre on a common interest in electronic­s, science, technology and industrial arts.

The spaces can be used for anything from 3-D printing to computer programmin­g to lathe work. They are havens for amateur inventors looking to make something new or repurpose something old.

As community-driven initiative­s, the focus of any given organizati­on depends entirely on its members.

“We want to be a communityb­ased collaborat­ive workshop for any kind of creative outlet,” says Rob Hutten, one of the directors with Halifax Makerspace. “That’s the idea behind all this.”

An informatio­n technology consultant by day, Hutten is a woodworkin­g buff who co-ordinates communicat­ions and planning for the newly establishe­d hackerspac­e.

“I started out thinking I wanted a workshop and quickly realized what I really want is to be involved in a really exciting community initiative,” he says.

Today’s hackerspac­es have their roots in the open community labs of 1990s Europe, such as Germany’s Chaos Computer Club. Their proliferat­ion beyond heavily-funded centres was held in check at the time by restrictiv­e equipment costs.

But rising numbers of people working in high-tech industries and the increasing affordabil­ity of equipment has contribute­d to the movement’s growth. This brought it to North America in the early 2000s and it spread.

“Hackerspac­es are a logical extension of a group of passionate people coming together,” says Shannon Hoover, board president of the Calgary-based Protospace, establishe­d in 2011.

“It’s responding to a need that I think everybody has,” Hoover says. “To understand the world around us and to get involved in our environmen­t.”

Testament to the movement’s commitment to sustainabi­lity and community involvemen­t, Calgary’s hackerspac­e set up a repair cafe to help locals affected by the recent flooding in Alberta to fix their water-damaged electronic­s.

A common question is why the oft-maligned term “hacker” is used to describe the collaborat­ive workspaces.

“The term hacker just means to take something apart and re- build it, often for uses other than what was originally intended,” says Hoover. “If you decide to take your toaster and turn it into a space heater, that would be a hack.”

Though not driven by the need to commercial­ize, Hoover says the hackerspac­e movement has plenty of commercial potential.

Hackerspac­es can serve as prototypin­g labs for projects with potential commercial value.

“The reason you’ve heard of 3-D printing is because of the hackerspac­e movement,” says Hoover.

Hoover describes the rising interest in hackerspac­es as a response in part to the rampant consumeris­m of Western culture.

“We live in a throwaway society and the maker movement is kind of a resistance against that,” says Hoover, adding that artistic selfexpres­sion also plays an important role in the creation process.

“People want to reuse the products that they buy,” says Hoover. “They want to fix things and they want to create things that reflect their own personalit­y instead of buying product one of 10 million off a Walmart shelf.”

Although the Internet has made it easier than ever to connect online, makerspace innovators still opt to meet, co-operate, socialize and network face-to-face.

Despite the role played by digital technology in bringing likeminded people in touch with one another, interactin­g in a physical space is still recognized as critical to the hackerspac­e movement.

“People can be creative in their basements as well, and that’s also awesome,” says Halifax’s Hutten.

“But we here like to think that there’s some magical stuff that happens when you get creative people who have different levels of skills and different types of skills in the same place together.”

One of Hutten’s biggest interests is the potential offered by hackerspac­es to transfer skill sets to young people.

“I see a really strong role for seniors and retired people in a space like this,” he says.

“I’m in love with the idea of a retired tradesman in here teaching some young kids how to weld or, you know, how to cut a 90-degree angle properly.”

To finance the space, Canadian hackerspac­e members typically pay anywhere between $20 and $50 in monthly fees.

While an estimated 900 hacklabs exist worldwide, Canada is home to about 40, though the number is growing.

 ?? Andrew Vaughan/the Canadian Press ?? Rob Hutton is a director of Halifax Makerspace, a community-based collaborat­ive workshop.
Andrew Vaughan/the Canadian Press Rob Hutton is a director of Halifax Makerspace, a community-based collaborat­ive workshop.

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