The digital age has spawned an exciting new wave of creativity.
But what if you have a creative spark, great new ideas, or just a desire to muck around with new technology and tools, but you don鈥檛 have the hardware, the software, or the wherewithal to indulge your digital muse?
The at 91大黄鸭 branch is for you!
The space is built to encourage STEAM programming 鈥 Science, Technology, Engineering, Arts and Math 鈥 and help creators do what they do best: create.
You鈥檒l find a 3D printer, a Cricut vinyl cutter, Dobot Robotic Arm, Sphero Robots, the full Adobe creative suite, a recording studio, video capability and more.
鈥淲e鈥檙e at the unique intersection of the cultural district and the tech centre of 91大黄鸭,鈥 said Christopher Stephenson, the branch鈥檚 head librarian. 鈥淭here are a lot of talented people and mentors standing by to share their expertise and help the community learn new skills together.鈥
The library already runs engineering and coding clubs for preteens and teens. Club members with an interest and an aptitude can book the space and explore the tools on their own or with their group. 鈥淭hat leads to new hobbies and might lead in a different direction of future study,鈥 Stephenson said. 鈥淲e hope to be a feeder location for some of the great programs that happen at the college level.鈥
Building community connections
The library is building connections among existing arts groups, Women in Trades, First Nations, schools and homeschool associations. With the B.C. educational curriculum updated to include design thinking, the Makerspace can complement what schools are doing. And while it sounds like something for technologically advanced young people, Stephenson said it鈥檚 an extension of the existing role of public libraries 鈥 to make information available to everyone.
鈥淎s the world gets more complex, we have young kids all the way up to seniors who may be falling behind with technology, but still need to function in the world. We鈥檙e there to help bring people up to speed,鈥 he said.
If you want to see the Makerspace in action, and experiment with the possibilities, the library offers public open hours on Wednesday nights and Saturdays. There will be some training available.
鈥淲e鈥檒l offer some basic training. Once you develop the aptitudes, we鈥檒l allow people to come and play and explore,鈥 Stephenson said.
鈥淭he page hasn鈥檛 been written yet for what the Makerspace will become,鈥 he said. 鈥淚t really depends on the unique needs and desires of the community, so that鈥檚 what we鈥檙e interested in hearing.鈥