<\/a><\/p>\nFigure 2:<\/strong> MIT-Fablab Norway, extract from Bosqu\u00e9\u2019s sketchbook (30 June 2013). Note the placement of hearth, chairs and tables in the centre, while digital fabrication tools and equipment are centrifuged to the back and sides. There is a kitchen immediately to the left as one enters and a bed or resting place on each side among the workstations.<\/p>\nKarlsen is in his early sixties. He was born here and, after training as an engineer, spent his youth working with sheep insemination on the family farm, which is located \u201cjust down from the Fab Lab\u201d. He\u2019s an unmissable figure in the region; he has also been successively a teacher and farmer. He owns several houses and land at the edge of the fjord. Karlsen himself described his Fab Lab as now more of a \u201ccommunity centre\u201d than a place for prototyping: \u201cIt has even held a wedding celebration!\u201d His stories to both researchers about visitors, activities and projects confirmed this representation.<\/p>\n
For instance, the video-conferencing screen broadcast other Fab Labs\u2019 webcams during our visits, but it is especially useful for other purposes: Karlsen reported how professionals such as nurses come here to attend distance education courses conducted in Oslo or Trondheim. The mayor of the municipality came by during Kohtala\u2019s visit; Karlsen said he drops in from time to time to discuss local problems, such as the number of school drop-outs in the region. Others popped in for coffee during Bosqu\u00e9\u2019s visit to find out about the impending birth of the most recent foal.<\/p>\n
Such unconventional activities for a Fab Lab also meant unconventional roles for researchers. We helped cook, we went for walks in the stunning terrain, and we worked long hours \u2013 either talking with Karlsen and his visitors or working alone on our notes, bathed in the strange pine-yellow light. The equipment was usually silent.<\/p>\n
When we dined, we sat on dramatic high-backed wooden chairs, each named and physically profiled after a local fell. Designer Jens Dyvik (see DyvikDesign 2013) had helped realise the chairs on the ShopBot, a milling machine that was conspicuous by its absence. Bosqu\u00e9 began to ask about it often enough that finally \u2013 despite his reticence to have any focus at all on the technologies \u2013 Karlsen agreed to take her to the farm where the milling machine was housed. It was hidden behind a door in a small shed at the end of a cluttered barn; it was dusty and likely not recently or regularly used. Moreover access was difficult and the room narrow. During winter, when sheep come back from the fells, they are herded in with the ShopBot.<\/p>\n
Perhaps because MIT-Fablab Norway was quite unlike any other fieldwork site we had visited, we became hyper-aware of how Fab Labs are \u2018third places\u2019 other than work or home. We saw afresh how the Fab Lab network \u2013 as a community as well as a collection of communities \u2013 differs from how we understand and relate to institutionalised societal structures such as formal education or industrial mass production. This can paint Labs as unfamiliar and mysterious places for the average citizen.<\/p>\n
However, it was \u2018normal\u2019 for anyone to walk into the Norway Fab Lab, from the mayor to farmers to the neighbour renovating his house; this almost domestication of fabbing (especially considering the kitchen and the beds in the Lab) began to render the outside world and its conventional structures as almost unnatural in their turn. This was compounded by our own experiences of immersion and suspension in the Lab\u2019s environment, as well as Karlsen\u2019s own discourse \u2013 which heaped scorn on traditional institutions (especially universities during Kohtala\u2019s visit) while praising openness and reciprocity. Such a normalising process was obviously enabled by Karlsen\u2019s charisma and role in his community; we have no doubt he would have had an equally influential role in Lyngen had the MIT connection and Fab Lab germination not occurred. As it did, Karlsen was the conduit to make the otherwise opaque construct of a Fab Lab acceptable and everyday in its small, rural local community.<\/p>\n
To be fair, considering the population of the region, perhaps the amount of personal fabrication that took place during our visits was proportional, and there was certainly evidence in abundance. In the following section we return to the core of a Fab Lab, the making, a subject that bridges the identities of the Norwegian Fab Lab as both a pioneering MIT Lab and as a third place for community work of various kinds. What should be noted about the Lab\u2019s making activity is its place in the timeline: the most significant hustle and bustle seems to have passed, as the Lab continues in a trajectory into more consequential municipal community involvement, likely driven by funding opportunities as well as Karlsen\u2019s commitment to local action and betterment. However, even as Karlsen relied on storytelling means to communicate the tale of the community centre, an obvious source of pride and achievement, he was especially animated when relating stories about making and inventing.<\/p>\n
5. THE STORY OF MAKING<\/span><\/h2>\nIn his anecdotes Karlsen was especially skilled at building up tension: at \u2018gearing up\u2019 his listener for an exciting outcome. \u201cWhat is this?\u201d he asked Kohtala, as they sat at the table on a chilly September evening, hints of the Northern Lights glimmering outside. The stories always started this way, the presentation of the problem or context, the heroes, the first ideas and prototypes, the struggles… and eventually the result, whether it was the artificial insemination device, developed as part of the Electronic Shepherd process, or a solar-powered LED lamp developed in Africa. The effect was not to emphasise the object or the invention however; the intention was always to stress the need the invention caters to \u2013 which was always local, always developed in collaboration, and always something that combined previous, even ancient, ideas in new ways.<\/p>\n
Bosqu\u00e9 asked directly for an inventory of the projects and was treated to the same storytelling ritual. \u201cWhat is this?\u201d The first object Karlsen put on the table was a cardboard box and many small plastic pieces, presented as prototypes for chocolates. \u201cOne day, in 2007, a woman came to the door and said: I want to make a chocolate factory, I need some chocolate moulds. And we said: OK, no problem, we can make it, we can help you. So we started to make moulds.\u201d<\/p>\n
\u201cWhat is this? It\u2019s a house for a dog race.\u201d The next object was placed on the table, as simply sheets of lasercut cardboard. The organisers of a large dog race had come to Karlsen and explained their problem: they had hundreds of dogs racing over an entire fortnight and sleeping in hay outside. A proper shelter system was needed so each dog could have security and rest. \u201cI said we can do it flat-packed,\u201d explained Karlsen, \u201cand we made the first prototypes.\u201d In story after story links were constantly drawn between people and ideas, during planning and fabrication. When Bosqu\u00e9 asked Karlsen why he likes these stories, he answered: \u201cYou must not have the feeling that I have made that alone; all this is the result of a global network of people who want to cooperate and share knowledge: two kids from Boston, a shy woman from northern Norway….\u201d Who had the idea, who did the design, who contributed \u2013 sometimes these were remembered and important and sometimes not. What was central was that the outcome and the process in which it was developed manifested the spirit of a Fab Lab: free and open, for people\u2019s own needs, where they live.<\/p>\n
Moreover, knowledge should be shared and people should not be categorised when they come in the door: \u201cinventor\u201d became synonymous with \u201cdesigner\u201d and \u201cmaker\u201d. In Nordic languages, the word \u2018design\u2019 is cognate with the term \u2018form-giving\u2019 and many other words equally serve, such as \u2018planning\u2019 or \u2018developing\u2019. Karlsen tended to favour these other verbs, and during a pause Kohtala asked him directly for his definition of design. He hesitated and laughed at the same time: \u201cNo.\u2026\u201d \u201cBecause these [objects you are showing me] are designed,\u201d she countered. \u201cSo all the boats, all things people have needed over millions of years, have been developed by people where they are, […] for their use, scaled for the way they really need it,\u201d he replied. The real answer to Kohtala\u2019s question came at the end of the day, at the end of a different, unrelated story: \u201cBack to your answer, what is design, and who has the decision on what is design, nobody<\/em>,\u201d he stated emphatically. One cannot help but be reminded that Lyngseidet is a small, remote municipality where urban tendencies to specialisation are impossible or even detrimental. Making and fabbing in this context serve as local entrepreneur support and citizen education, for purposes ranging from marketing and product development to agriculture or telecommunications research to simply exploring and learning.<\/p>\nThe making and prototyping was furthermore where the links to the global network became more visible: during Kohtala\u2019s visit Knut Klo was working on the design of a drone, a \u2018helicopter\u2019 that could carry a camera, whose plans were to be made available to the Fab Lab community on the Wiki. The drone had first been developed by Klo, Karlsen and Dyvik, who by that point was in Indonesia working on the inter-lab \u201clow-cost prosthesis project\u201d with Fablab Amsterdam\u2019s Alex Schaub (lowcostprosthesis.org 2012). In the early hectic years, the Norway Fab Lab was a making hub, hosting several well-attended Boot Camps as well as FAB2.5 and forming important, lasting connections. In one video (fablabbcn 2009) posted on YouTube, Gershenfeld can be seen perched on the mezzanine, working with his computer on his stomach. Schaub is also there, as is Tomas Diez from Fab Lab Barcelona.<\/p>\n
Karlsen spoke less about these Boot Camps, however; his stories tended to regale the early projects that marked the genesis of a particular Lab, whether it was the \u201csheep phone\u201d that inaugurated his own Lab or the LED lamp (which became known as the \u201cHaakon lamp\u201d) associated with the genesis of one of the Kenyan Labs, which Karlsen helped found. Similarly, Karlsen\u2019s making stories about solutions for the region\u2019s entrepreneurs emphasised local needs and the connection to and collaboration with the local community. In all probability stories strictly about fabbing activities amongst maker insiders had less appeal except when they had a social dimension. To be sure, what excited Karlsen most was diversity: when anyone can design, develop, invent, make and build, and when diverse people come together without the barriers of conventional institutions, then something truly powerful can happen.<\/p>\n
6. THE STORY OF NETWORKS<\/span><\/h2>\nIn Karlsen\u2019s world, such an empowering vision is rendered conceivable and attainable by the three processes we have observed thus far: the third place characteristic of Fab Labs, which helps break down traditional conceptions of access and jurisdiction; the normalising effect of the Norway Lab and how it embraces a wider set of collaborators not restricted to maker practitioners; and the promotion of the vision through rhetoric which aims to inculcate attitudes and values. We learn through his storytelling that entering the Fab Lab world promises skills and knowledge, a way to meet one\u2019s own needs and other espoused benefits; we may thus consider not just desirable but inevitable the transition to a network-based society \u2013 or the non-hierarchical, non-judgmental society Karlsen wishes to promote.<\/p>\n
For example, for all his criticisms of universities \u2013 in Kohtala\u2019s paraphrasing this meant their hierarchies and the power granted to professors, their ability to dominate innovation support systems as well as knowledge transmission, and their tyranny over science \u2013 Karlsen would provide numerous inspiring stories about individuals reaching their own potential: where people of all ages and abilities were granted access to knowledge sharing and teaching at the Fab Lab. Moreover, where the \u201cmagic\u201d happened was not merely through open access for the marginalised but when different types of people were able to mix together: \u201cDuring many years we have had so many strange people here in the Lab; […] when you find many different people, where they have this cross-over, then you have something. How can you put all this down in rules: it\u2019s impossible.\u201d For Karlsen, \u201cstrange\u201d was a neutral adjective used to describe nearly everything, from the unconventional or surprising to the unknown. These strange people are not allowed into universities because of \u201crules\u201d \u2013 which also bar them from jobs, entrepreneurial support or simply opportunities to explore their own ideas and inventions.<\/p>\n
This does not mean a network-oriented, heterarchical social world does not have rules: the Fab Lab network has the Fab Charter that embodies the values of openness, access and reciprocity. There are no sanctions for not following the Charter, if one does not include having to endure Karlsen\u2019s heated chastisements. Instead, in true p2p fashion, the conformity ranking is made transparent: an ongoing chart that documents each Lab\u2019s compliance with the Charter principles \u2013 open access for the public, having a basic inventory of the same equipment that eases inter-lab project work, and giving something back to the network (NM\u00cd Kvikan 2012).<\/p>\n
Nevertheless, for Karlsen rules are like categories: they protect people, which serves to keep some in and others out. And it is not only the people who should not be categorised \u2013 the Fab Lab should not and cannot be. In the first years the \u2018network\u2019 existed, those first few Labs scattered among various continents, Karlsen said the Americans did not know how to take it: was it a development project, an aid project or an innovation project? On research projects and surveys that try to make sense of the current network, Karlsen scoffed:<\/p>\n
…there are so many people who see that the Fab Lab network is super cool, and they try to make a description, to put the Fab Lab into a form, into a matrix, and it never fits. The Fab Lab here is one thing, the Fab Lab in Africa is another, the Fab Lab in the United States is a third one. There is no sense to make all the labs exactly the same. The diversity, that\u2019s the good thing with the Fab Lab.<\/p><\/blockquote>\n
Such diversity allows each Lab to cater to local needs, where people live. But does this not problematise \u2018normal\u2019 support one could influence or access, such as government innovation policy and funding? \u201cThat\u2019s a super problem for all the Labs. We don\u2019t fit into any policy; […] they don\u2019t know how to handle us. When they put us in the state budget, yes or no, we are there, we are not that.\u201d<\/p>\n
However, if indeed the Fab Lab world does become normalised (and note that we use both normalisation and domestication as descriptive, exploratory terms and not as definitive interpretations at this point), what may happen to its self-conception as an alternative: as not<\/em> institutionalised or at least consciously avoiding the hierarchic structures of mainstream institutions and their concomitant rules and categories? Perhaps there are some clues in how Karlsen understands and conveys the very idea of the Fab Lab network.<\/p>\nLet us examine a diagram, a typical organisation chart with boxes and rows. Karlsen explains:<\/p>\n
Normally an organisation should be like this: you have the Fab Foundation at the top, you have Fab Labs, you have business creation here in the middle, and you have the Academy here on the side. This is the normal way to organise a structure. […] This is how you would learn it in […] business school. Then you report, and everything works well. But here, in the Fab Lab structure, all the arrows are upside down. […] The top is only a result of what is happening in the grassroots. It\u2019s not some people who sit at the top and give orders and make the structure down through the organisation, down to the Labs growing up all around the world. Here you seed something and coming up is a strange thing, and you have […] the grassroots stream up all the time, so all the arrows in a Fab Lab organisation are upside down. Or downside up.<\/p><\/blockquote>\n
How Karlsen describes the process of \u201cseeding\u201d here is particularly apt: one may plant a seed, but what comes up will take on its own character based on the soil, the sun and the nutrients available. The best way to develop, or grow, solutions for a particular community is to enable it to meet its own local needs, where people live. A Fab Lab is a seed, or a container for one.<\/p>\n
And what then is the role of the Fab Lab network? For Karlsen, the network is a global coming together of \u201cmany small brains\u201d that become a \u201cbig brain\u201d when they cooperate and work together according to the same values or \u201cwith the same approach\u201d. When describing the \u2018helicopter\u2019 project, Karlsen suddenly veered to talking about the material chosen for the propellers and how their milled birch propellers do not break. Superior to the carbon fibre common in such projects, birch is described as \u201cfantastic\u201d, a \u201cliving material\u201d that has \u201ccomputers in every cell\u201d. This way of portraying wood \u2013 and plants by implication \u2013 as a distribution of intelligence is so akin to how he describes the Fab Lab network, i.e. as a \u201cnetwork of brains\u201d, that one sits up and takes notice. This is why Karlsen wants us to focus on the people and not on the technologies: it is the people and their individual strengths and curiosities that have formed the Fab Lab movement and will continue its trajectory.<\/p>\n
Again we hear the definition of a Fab Lab: \u201cA house like this, that\u2019s only a facility and all the things you have around here, the tools, software, a Fab Lab you have to remember absolutely all the time, a Fab Lab is a global network of people. It\u2019s not a global network of houses or other dead things, it\u2019s a global network of people that want to cooperate and share knowledge.\u201d Not only the material is living; the knowledge is living knowledge and the network is alive and organic, growing, evolving and changing. Technologies in themselves do not better communities; the \u201cremarkable story\u201d is contained within the \u201ccombination of brains who push all of us a little bit forward\u201d. Karlsen asks us to consider \u201chow did all these brains stimulate each other to make remarkable things, and you [will] see that nothing is impossible\u201d. Through Karlsen\u2019s storytelling, people become the heroes of a collective adventure, where doing one\u2019s best and doing it for everyone\u2019s betterment is paramount.<\/p>\n
Nevertheless, there is an obvious concern for an organisation that wants to remain free and open. Near the end of the visit, Kohtala asked about a Boot Camp schedule where a discussion topic was titled \u201cBusiness, Entrepreneurship and Sustainability\u201d. Despite common rhetoric in maker culture as to the environmental benefits of small-scale digital fabrication, Karlsen confirmed that \u201csustainability\u201d in that case was financial, not environmental, as funding for Fab Labs becomes increasingly problematic as they develop beyond the first few years. Economic sustainability must now be the priority for Labs: it is \u201cthe most important thing\u201d. How this is playing out in the Norwegian Lab, however, seems to indicate a move away from making and fabbing as central practices and towards other sources of income such as tourism that require completely different skill sets.<\/p>\n
Moreover, emphasising the Fab Lab as a third space may recruit maker practitioners, but it may also repel other key stakeholders. Karlsen\u2019s stories are peppered with references to how Fab Labs fall into the gaps \u2013 neither concerned with education, innovation, agriculture, industry, technology development nor social development \u2013 but all of these and none of them simultaneously. In a world of old paradigm conventional structures, funders may find it difficult to grasp what exactly it is they are being asked to finance. The very identity of a Fab Lab as representing a new paradigm, as expressed in Karlsen\u2019s discourse, is both the source of its frailty and its strength.<\/p>\n
7. DISCUSSION AND CONCLUSION<\/span><\/h2>\nFor reasons of space, clarity and coherence, we have summarised our fieldwork into three themes and four stories, keeping in mind the perils of omission that come with such neat packaging. We have attempted to limit these dangers by constricting the size of our themes and restricting our analysis to focus on Karlsen\u2019s storytelling. This allows us to condense the following key messages.<\/p>\n
Not all Fab Labs in the MIT Fab Lab network are alike, despite their surface similarity; each Lab becomes an entity shaped by \u2013 and over time also shaping \u2013 its founders, funders, fabbers and followers. Labs are also likely to experience a tension or need for balance between acting in their particular local environment and reaping the benefits of belonging to the network. Labs may value the MIT connection and wish to make it part of their profile and in turn may procure more influence in the network; MIT\u2019s Center for Bits and Atoms by the same token can co-opt positive stories from individual Labs. Because of both its history in the network and its peripheral location, both of which tend to the extreme, the Norway Lab accentuates this Janus-faced character: its Arctic rurality is core to its identity, but so is the identity of MIT and the global, virtual network. We thereby clearly see the role that seminal Fab Labs and individuals may play in communicating (and at times steering) the image, goals, strategies, visions and ambitions of the Fab Lab network \u2013 both within the network itself as well as to outsiders.<\/p>\n
Secondly, we have shown how the Norwegian Fab Lab, in its identity as community centre, differs from other Labs in the network in a way that makes it more acceptable and almost domesticated to its local community. This made for a somewhat strange experience for the maker-researchers but is likely a factor of its peripheral location, which necessitates cooperation across a broad range of interests. Nevertheless, the effect was that of a distancing from prototyping and fabbing.<\/p>\n
Thirdly, this portrait of a Fab Lab seemingly moving away from digital fabrication activities can indicate what may happen to younger labs as they become more established, swayed as they are by local conditions, charismatic leaders, and the need to remain funded in some form. The last point is especially pertinent, as the need to ensure economic sustainability easily comes into conflict with other values espoused in makerspaces: open access, free sharing, suspicion of mass manufacturing, and the like. This seems to be the fulcrum of success upon which Labs pivot \u2013 whether continued existence is ensured by becoming a community centre, a research laboratory, a fabrication service, or another adopted identity that conforms better to rather than rebels against conventional categories.<\/p>\n
Finally, we have illustrated the role of stories and rhetoric in shaping culture \u2013 stories to boost learning, stories to establish reputation, and stories and metaphors on growing and seeding as guides for envisioning new forms of organisation. We have seen how this Fab Lab founder, with seemingly few exceptions, walks the talk and embeds the values he espouses in his Lab, but he may be afforded this opportunity by his other identities in the community (farmer, teacher, inventor, social worker and so on) that surround his profile of Fab Lab Director.<\/p>\n
We emphasise that these implications emerge from a particular story created by a place, time, a charismatic lead character, and a particular set of circumstances. Capturing a moment of time in an otherwise quickly changing phenomenon can shed light on what came before and \u2013 for the researchers that come after us \u2013 what develops in future. We find this particularly relevant in the case of Fab Labs, as they serve as a visible, observable representation of what happens when a group of people decide to formalise material peer production in terms of a designated space and provide a certain infrastructure for making.<\/p>\n
Subsequent explorations may address the literature and reflect upon certain nuances of this story: exploring the data anew with lenses focused even more on how the community provides infrastructure and shares and protects its commons (as in Star and Ruhleder 1996; Ostrom 1990). This narrative aims to provide a foundation for this future work.<\/p>\n