Armed with precision lasers, routers, microprocessors and a tangle-some array of wires, students scrambled last week to finish cheeky robots that mix cocktails, shoot dirt, draw faces and more at Century College's Fabrication Lab, one of just 28 Massachusetts Institute of Technology (MIT) manufacturing labs around the globe.¶ The "Fab Lab" in White Bear Lake and its far-flung cousins stand at the forefront of a movement that MIT started seven years ago with a $13.7 million grant from the National Science Foundation (NSF). ¶ With MIT's help, Century College kicked off its lab last year, and recently won a $650,000 NSF grant to expand its engineering curriculum and get more students hooked on high-tech digital manufacturing.
The specialty lab -- run by five technicians/professors and equipped with $90,000 worth of digital and high-precision tools and free engineering software -- is one of just six in the United States. It's designed to put machinery to work in unique ways.
Last week, teams of students hovered over their projects like protective parents against a backdrop of earlier efforts: a windmill, an electric car, micro power generators and a new air hockey game outfitted with lasers, motion sensors and fans.
Peering over the shoulders of his 16- to 30-year-old students, engineering Prof. Tim Grebner said they can "program autonomous machines to do whatever you want. We're trying to promote creativity and problem-solving."
The program started with an NSF grant to MIT in 2000 that required community outreach.
"We said we are not good at that. But we are good at fabrication. So why don't we send little labs out into the world and see what will happen when you have the ability to make anything?" said Sherry Lassiter, program manager for the MIT Center for Bits and Atoms.
The original lab in Boston was replicated in Costa Rica, then in India, Norway and Ghana. South Africa now has six and Kenya has two labs.
Century College opened its lab last year, along with labs in Wisconsin and Ohio. This year, labs will launch in Chicago and San Diego. Last week Lassiter shipped fab lab components to Jalalabad, Afghanistan.