Fablab Setagaya At Iid
世田谷区, Tokyo, Japan
About Fablab Setagaya At Iid
The Fablab Setagaya At Iid Makerspace in 世田谷区, Tokyo, Japan, Japan, is a dedicated innovation centre for students, engineers, and creative professionals. it combines professional-grade fabrication equipment — including 3D printers, laser cutters, and microcontroller development kits — with a supportive community of makers and mentors. The lab actively supports the STEM ecosystem in Tokyo by hosting workshops on topics ranging from robotics and AI to sustainable design and product development. Entrepreneurs benefit from rapid prototyping capabilities that compress the distance between idea and market-ready product. Fablab Setagaya At Iid stands as proof that when tools, knowledge, and community come together, extraordinary things are built.
Description
The building that “FabLab Setagaya at IID” has the room at (this building’s name is IID, indeed), has been a junior high school until 2004. The same year, it was renovated into a space for design/architecture offices, start-up incubation, galleries, studios, cafe. It means a lot of people related with “create” are walking down the hallway and enter into casual conversations. They are not only professionals, since IID is a building open to the public, all different kinds of people come here, to see exhibitions, to attend workshops or just to walk around. Some of them stop by FabLab and start to “create” something. Then, really broad range of people from kids to professional architects, are using FabLab’s machines. We also hold workshops every week. Then people can learn broad range of subjects related with "create", like programing, 3DCAD etc.
Who Can Benefit
Students & Researchers
University and school students who want access to fabrication tools, prototyping equipment, and expert mentorship.
Entrepreneurs & Startups
Early-stage founders who need a collaborative space to build, test, and iterate on their hardware or software ideas.
Educators & Trainers
Teachers and trainers who want to run practical STEM workshops, coding bootcamps, or design sprints for their cohorts.
Independent Makers
Hobbyists, artists, and independent inventors who need access to tools and a community of like-minded creators.