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Liam Grace-Flood
An artist, engineer, and researcher, Liam makes all kinds of things, including public policy, fine art, electric motorcycles, and computational models. His passion for making is rivaled only by his dedication to ensuring other people have the resources they need to make, too. In that vein, as a 2017 Watson Fellow he's exploring how open workshops democratize and decentralize education, innovation, and industry to make better things, people, and communities.
You can find him at his website or on instagram
Latest from Liam Grace-Flood
06/12/2018
These questions might have two sets of answers: answers describing a space’s reality, and answers describing its aspirations. Ideally, those...
05/09/2018
Habibi.Works is a bright spot in an otherwise difficult and disturbing situation.
04/16/2018
What does it even mean to be a maker, to run a makerspace, or to participate in the Maker Movement?
03/08/2018
Be sure to reach all about Thingking’s work with the Maker Library Network, including their experimentations and books.
02/20/2018
Makerversity is a “pioneering community of Maker businesses” that's growing out of both London and Amsterdam.
02/02/2018
Sara Hendren’s work challenges our assumptions of what normal is—in engineering, design, bodies, and minds.
01/01/2018
Their mission is to empower people to become creative problem solvers who create technology solutions for community challenges
12/06/2017
A French fablab, La Casemate, was burned down by arsonists who hoped to destroy an institution they believed to be...
11/28/2017
Vigyan Ashram was the first Fab Lab outside MIT. They’ve long been a pillar of sustainable innovation and a hidden...
11/20/2017
The Maker Scene could address the disparity between the need for affordable innovation and the drive for high tech development.
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