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Inventorā€™s Paradise

Welding in the Idea Forge

At ¶¶Ņõ¶ĢŹÓʵ-Boulderā€™s Idea Forge, students imagine the future. Then they build it.

The smell of cherry pie carries a hint of metal and oil. Machines grate, drills whirr. The space, bright, open and airy, has high ceilings, concrete floors and long wooden tables.

Itā€™s March 13, the eve of Pi Day (3-14) ā€” hence the pie. Some students eat. Others, masked in safety goggles, attend to hungry grinding machines.ĢżEric FaubleĢż(MMechEngrā€™15), a graduate student from Golden, Colo., is building a device that simulates microsurgery, a practice tool for neurosurgeons.

Faubleā€™s work exemplifies what this inventorā€™s paradise, the Idea Forge, is all about.

ā€œItā€™s a place where students of every major are welcome and can become familiar with technology and build things, interact and learn things accidentally,ā€ says Idea Forge initiator Diane Sieber, an associate dean in the .

¶¶Ņõ¶ĢŹÓʵ-Boulder Engineering already had a machine shop and another hands-on lab, but they are reserved for engineering students only. The Idea Forge, located in the remodeled east wing of the old Fleming Law Building, is open to all students who partner with an engineer, fostering cross-disciplinary innovation.

At the Idea Forge, students of all majors can be inventors.

ā€œI believe strongly in the educational value of tinkering and learning publicly,ā€ says Sieber. ā€œOne of our instincts is to hide what we donā€™t know, but here students can enjoy not knowing and instead learn from one another and make things from initial concept to prototyping to manufacturing to selling.ā€

Taylor ScottĢż(MechEngrā€™15), a senior mechanical engineering major from Fort Collins, Colo., has been hard at work. He and partners developed a tool to aid data collection related to cruise shipsā€™ fuel consumption. With another team, he devised a way to make solar panels more energy efficient and less expensive, potentially helping developing-world farmers replace diesel-powered irrigation systems with solar-powered systems.

ā€œBy making solar irrigation more affordable, we increase the incomes of farmers and the standard of living in communities,ā€ says Scott.

The Forge came to fruition quickly. Sieber prepared a proposal over winter break in 2013; the space opened nine months later, after extensive remodeling largely sponsored by the College of Engineering.

ā€œIt had been vacant for about five years. There was graffiti on the walls. It was a forgotten place,ā€ says Daria Kotys-Schwartz, a mechanical engineering professor who also directs the Forge. ā€œBut if you had vision you also knew it had immense potential if we werenā€™t constrained by closed thinking. We walked through and imagined ā€˜what if.ā€™ā€

The result is a 22,000 square-foot, multi-purpose invention lab with band saws, milling machines, drills, sanders, routers and soldering stations, along with welding and meeting rooms, a classroom, offices and prototyping capabilities.

Alex KreileinĢż(TeleCommā€™15), a PhD candidate in interdisciplinary telecommunications from Milwaukee, happened upon it almost immediately. Also an entrepreneur who advises clients on mobile app development and information security, Kreilein says heā€™s deepened his understanding of project management and human-centered design by mixing with mechanical engineers.

ā€œWithout Idea Forge, Iā€™d have to spend hundreds of dollars a month on a co-working space thatā€™d likely be filled with people who think just like I do,ā€ says Kreilein.

Students also benefit from skilled Forge personnel, including a machine shop manager-machinist, instructor and lab engineer. Plans call for a full-time electronics lab engineer and assistant machinist.

Amy DeCastroĢż(ApMathā€™15), an applied math student and self-taught welder from Westport, Mass., oversees the Forgeā€™s welding shop.

ā€œThe projects seem endless ā€” from little tiny aluminum turbines to 20-foot-long stainless-steel heating systems,ā€ she says. ā€œThe first time I saw the welding room I thought Iā€™d spontaneously combust with joy. I feel really excited every time I come here.

Photography by Patrick Campbell