China Daily (Hong Kong)

Shenzhen maker spaces offer tools, technology and training to entreprene­urs

- By CHAI HUA and ZHOU MO in Shenzhen Contact the writers through grace@chinadaily­hk.com

The competitio­n between so-called “maker spaces” and incubators is becoming fiercer as their numbers have surged remarkably in recent years, industry players said. Innovation centers in Shenzhen, Guangdong province, are exploring new models to service startups and makers.

In the tech world, incubators, which fundamenta­lly provide physical office spaces, mainly serve as “middlemen landlords” for software startups. They provide networking opportunit­ies and basic business services.

But maker spaces — which provide a collaborat­ive co-working space for startups and offer usually for a monthly membership fee, access to tools, technology and classes — have emerged as a business model for the office leasing sec- tor and are expected to become a significan­t part of it.

Chaihuo Maker Space, the first maker space in Shenzhen, on Wednesday launched X.factory at the 2016 National Mass Innovation and Entreprene­urship Week in the southern Chinese manufactur­ing hub and innovation city.

Chaihuo has become one of the most well-known maker spaces in China after Premier Li Keqiang visited and became one of its mem- bers in January, 2015.

Since then, the maker space has attracted 90,000 visitors from all over the world and more than 4,500 registered members.

The overall size of the city’s innovation centers has also grown to more than 1,400 at municipal level or above by August, including 180 maker spaces, and attracted about 6,000 startups.

Pan Hao, founder of Chaihuo, introduced the first X.factory to open in Shenzhen’s Nanshan district, where most of the city’s hightech companies and startups are located and said more will follow in other cities later.

The 1,500-square-meter X.factory will bring i n profession­al manufactur­e equipment in a bid to convenient­ly realize global makers’ ideas.

Focusing on smart home electronic­s and architectu­re design, X.factory could also help traditiona­l furniture, clothes and other manufactur­ers to upgrade, Pan added.

Monica Shen, the X.factory project director, said the Chaihuo maker space focuses more on organizing education training and sharing meetings for amateur makers, but X.factory could help profession­al makers to produce prototypes for bulk production.

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