Makerspace

The Gregory School Fab Lab

Tucson, United States

Last Updated:
Type
Makerspace
Location
Tucson, United States
Address
3231 N Craycroft Rd, Tucson, United States

About The Gregory School Fab Lab

The Gregory School Fab Lab is a community Makerspace in Tucson, United States, United States. it provides open access to digital fabrication tools, electronics labs, and collaborative workspaces for students, educators, entrepreneurs, and independent makers. Members can work with 3D printers, laser cutters, CNC routers, and electronics prototyping equipment to turn ideas into functional prototypes. The space hosts regular STEM workshops, coding sprints, and design thinking sessions that attract talent from across United States. Whether you are a first-time maker or a seasoned hardware engineer, The Gregory School Fab Lab offers the tools, community, and mentorship needed to build, iterate, and innovate — making it one of the most valuable innovation resources in United States.

Description

Imagine a place where students are inspired. A space in which they research freely,experiment fearlessly and think courageously. Imagine a place where students design, build and create the best ideas they can imagine. A space where kids can make anything, tinker and experiment. A space where it's not only okay to fail, but failing epically is celebrated!. A place like that would create the kind of community that gives students the opportunity to connect with other learners, educators, and mentors. That place would, of course, provide access to a wide variety of material and technological resources. Imagine a place that also creates spaces for deep collaboration and that, by its very design, demands vibrant teamwork. This sort of place would inspire a new kind of learning -- a kind of learning required in the globally connected, infinitely complicated, and excitingly progressive 21st century world. In a space like this, cross-disciplinary collaboration that asks students to apply their learning in science, math, the arts & humanities to solve problems would naturally occur and the results would have real impact.

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.

Location

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