{"id":3274,"date":"2014-10-16T00:17:06","date_gmt":"2014-10-16T00:17:06","guid":{"rendered":"http:\/\/peerproduction.net\/?page_id=3274"},"modified":"2014-11-01T16:13:28","modified_gmt":"2014-11-01T16:13:28","slug":"fab-labs-forked-a-grassroots-insurgency-inside-the-next-industrial-revolution","status":"publish","type":"page","link":"http:\/\/peerproduction.net\/editsuite\/issues\/issue-5-shared-machine-shops\/editorial-section\/fab-labs-forked-a-grassroots-insurgency-inside-the-next-industrial-revolution\/","title":{"rendered":"Fab Labs Forked: A Grassroots Insurgency inside the Next Industrial Revolution"},"content":{"rendered":"
Peter Troxler<\/strong><\/p>\n When Neil Gershenfeld started the Center of Bits and Atoms (CBA) at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology (MIT) in 2001 to explore the merging of physical and computer science, part of his proposal was an outreach programme. It should bring the CBA\u2019s technology to classrooms and to the developing world. Outreach Fab Labs were built in Boston, in Costa Rica, in the village of Vigyan Ashram (India), and in Ghana. The MIT Fab Lab in Northern Norway, the oldest Fab Lab in Europe, was allegedly conceived in 2002, started in 2003 and formally opened in 2005. The aim, however, was to keep the number of Fab Labs at a level that would be easy to oversee and manage. The MIT\u2019s \u201cPhysical Map of the World, April 2004\u201d showed ten Fab Labs in the Americas, nine in Africa, eight in Europe and five in Asia, a total of 32 FabLabs. No one would have thought then that ten years later a single, small country like the Netherlands would boast as many Fab Labs as there were globally in 2004, and that the number of labs world wide would have grown tenfold.<\/p>\n Fab Labs were conceived as an outreach programme to the Center of Bits and Atoms research programme at MIT. From a handful of initial labs they grew to tens in the first five years of the programme, and to hundreds in the decade thereafter. This article pinpoints one event that crucially contributed to that growth and identifies the challenges the global network of Fab Labs faces today. It concludes with a critical, but positive, outlook on the future of the Fab Lab community and the challenges it faces.<\/p>\n 2005 saw the publication of Neil Gershenfeld\u2019s book \u2018FAB: The Coming Revolution on Your Desktop \u2013 from Personal Computers to Personal Fabrication\u2019, and with it growing public awareness of the phenomenon. The same year, South Africa was the first country to implement a national Fab Lab programme through the Advanced Manufacturing Technology Strategy of the country\u2019s national Department of Science and Technology (Borde & Coetzee, 2005). This included setting up six labs within the time span of two years. The CBA was on a route of \u201cestablishing a growing network of field Fab Labs to explore the prospective users and applications of these technologies\u201d (Mawson 2005).<\/p>\n In 2006, a Dutch website for Fab Labs was set up with the aim to promote FabLabs in the Netherlands; a year later, a private Fab Lab foundation was set up in the Netherlands. Two media institutes in Amsterdam, Mediamatic and Waag Society, started their respective Fab Labs in 2007, as temporary experiments. Something different was going on: this was not a centralized, state-run programme but loose groups of individuals and private organisations that were keen to have their Fab Labs, a group of enthusiasts, loosely organized in the Dutch Fab Lab foundation, gathering around the idea of Fab Labs and the slogan \u201cWhere the future is being made today!\u201d<\/p>\n When Neil Gershenfeld was invited to speak at the PicNic festival in Amsterdam in 2007 he took the opportunity to offer the CBA\u2019s collaboration with the Dutch Fab Lab Foundation. Reportedly that collaboration would have entailed paying the CBA a development fee of some hundred thousand Euros \u2013 not as absurd a figure if one takes into account that the CBA\u2019s initial 13.75 million dollar NSF grant was about to run out in 2008. Unlike everywhere else, however, foundations in the Netherlands are not as a rule established through some generous endowment but rather the most lightweight instrument to legally incorporate a not-for-profit organization; so many foundations in the Netherlands have very little or no capital at all. The Dutch Fab Lab Foundation being no exception they had to politely but decidedly decline the collaboration offer from CBA \u2013 and probably feared that herewith their dream of bringing Fab Labs to the Netherlands had found a premature end.<\/p>\n But the unexpected happened. Neil Gershenfeld was rather supportive of the idea and encouraged the Dutch to push ahead. \u201cIt is going fast in your country; that doesn\u2019t surprise me. The Dutch are good at collaborating and working in networks. That is crucial. You can spearhead this innovation\u201d (Dalm 2007, own translation). The coming years, the Netherlands saw a rapid and sustained growth of the number of labs. The two Amsterdam labs were merged into the one that became a fixed asset of Waag Society\u2019s portfolio. In 2008, three more labs started. Protospace in Utrecht got money from the European Union\u2019s regional funds. Cab Fab Lab in The Hague started at the local incubator \u201cCaballero Fabriek\u201d. Fab Lab Groningen found local subsidies to pay its first years.<\/p>\n The next Fab Lab to join the rapidly growing Fab Lab community in the Netherlands was Fab Lab Amersfoort. This one was radically different from the other labs in the Netherlands and even in the global network. It was not part of a university or high school nor of any other established institution. It was not funded by a government or industry grant. This was a lab that had been set up by a collective of artists \u201cin 7 days with 4 people and about EUR 5000\u201d – or at least that\u2019s the narrative of their \u201cFab Lab Instructable\u201d (Zijp 2011).<\/p>\n Fab Lab Amersfoort was different to with regard to the CBA specifications and previous practice in a couple of respects. First, it was truly independent. Second, it differed in size and equipment from the initial model which required an investment of roughly 100k US Dollars (or Euro) \u2013 interestingly, for some reason, the press keeps citing a figure of around 30k for initial investment, not taking into account expenses for hand tools, computers, networking and consumables. Amersfoort showed that many capabilities of a Fab Lab could be achieved with a 5k Euro investment.<\/p>\n The Dutch developed three elements that had not been part of the outreach strategy of CBA: labs without a formalised relation with MIT, a reinterpretation of the basic machine set to match smaller budgets, and the can-do attitude of an independent, grass roots approach. They could most aptly be described as a fork of the model devised by CBA, as innovations on the initial outreach and business model. The Fab Foundation that spun out of CBA officially declares that a CBA partnership for setting up labs \u201cisn\u2019t realistic for a community lab. It\u2019s more appropriate for research agreements, or for large networks of labs, say for a country like India\u201d (Fab Foundation 2013). The principle of \u201cpowers of ten\u201d, Fab Labs at the size of 10k, 100k and 1000k USD investment, officially became an element of the programme in 2013, when Neil Gershenfeld tasked a working group at the annual gathering in Yokohama to establish an official inventory for a 10k Fab Lab; this was presented at a Fab Lab meeting in Moscow (Bakker 2013). The idea of grass roots Fab Labs has spread globally and is practiced next to the \u201cconventional\u201d mode of a host agency that takes ownership of the Fab Lab. The Fab Foundation acknowledges that \u201c[t]he cheapest and fastest method to get a fab lab is to buy and assemble it yourself\u201d (Fab Foundation 2013). The CBA scrutinized those innovations, accepted them and eventually integrated them into their outreach narrative.<\/p>\n Indeed, the Netherlands counts forty-one labs, of which seven under development, the Netherlands maintains the highest density of Fab Labs in Europe and world wide [1]<\/a><\/strong> with ten times as many labs per inhabitants than the Unites States of America, where the concept was created, and twice the density of France or Italy. The development of Fab Labs in Europe appears to have generated a higher density in countries where the grass roots approach has taken root \u2013 Switzerland, Italy and France. While an important proportion of the Fab Labs in Spain, the UK and Germany are grass roots initiatives, their population is dominated by \u201cconventional\u201d labs at host institutions.<\/p>\n Table 1: Density of Fab Labs per inhabitants for countries with more than 10 Fab Labs (as of June 2014).<\/p>\nFrom a Book to National Strategic Programmes<\/span><\/h2>\n
Business Model Innovation<\/span><\/h2>\n
Growth and Challenges<\/span><\/h2>\n