‘CloudLab’ looks to spark conversation in Vanier
Mobile design studio to open in July
By Alex Robinson
Ottawa East News, May 04, 2015
A new mobile collaborative design studio is set to make its first pit stop in Vanier this summer.
Ottawa-based design firm PrototypeD Team is teaming up with the Quartier Vanier BIA to open what it calls a CloudLab in July.
Decked out with innovative technology such as 3D printers and scanners, the firm hopes the pop up studio will serve as a place where local stakeholders come to talk about urban change.
Janak Alford, the CEO and founder of PrototypeD Team, said Vanier was an obvious choice for the studios’ first stop as the neighbourhood is on the cusp of revitalization.
“For us Vanier was a no brainer,” he said. “It’s on the verge of a big transformation. There is also a strong sentiment in the area they don’t want the community to be condo-dominated and they want to preserve the character of the neighbourhood and their history. We hope to assist in that conversation.”
Alford said another thing that drew him to the neighbourhood was its many artists and creative residents, which give it a “Greenwich Village affect.”
Jamie Kwong, the executive director of Quartier Vanier, said while the CloudLab’s presence in the neighbourhood will only be temporary, she expects the discussion sparked from it will be long-lasting.
“This is going to start the conversation of what we can envision for our community,” she said.
“It gives us something to work towards, as we are in a state of transformation.”
One of the first things Alford would like to do once the CloudLab is up and running is create a 3D model of Vanier to help guide that discussion on urban renewal.
The CloudLab will be made up of two solar-powered, 37-square-metre containers, connected by a public patio.
Half of the space will be used by Alford and his staff in their design work. The other half will be a collaborative area where public engagement and workshops will happen, Alford said.
The studio will offer workshops about urban transformation, as well as architectural, graphic and industrial design.
PrototypeD Team and the BIA have a few locations in mind for the studio, but they have not finalized where it will be parked yet.
Alford’s firm has been working out of a basement studio in the Glebe over the last four years, working on projects such as an innovation centre at the Bayview Yards.
The firm is set to leave the Glebe and take its work on the road with the new CloudLab.
PrototypeD Team has also leased some space in the Gallipeau Centre in Smith’s Falls, where it expects to do the majority of its manufacturing going forward.
The CloudLab will stay in Vanier until October, at which point, Alford hopes to take it across Ontario to other communities to help support rural economic development.
Alford said if Vanier residents see the CloudLab as something they could see themselves using in the long term, he would be open to the possibility of having a permanent hub in the neighbourhood at some point in the future.
http://www.ottawacommunitynews.com/news-...b-looks-to-spark-conversation-in-vanier/