A while back a local blogger suggested Asheville libraries should offer makerspaces, which are sometimes called hackerspaces or fablabs. Essentially such offerings serve persons with a do-it-yourself orientation.
“A Librarian’s Guide to Makerspaces: 16 Resources” offers some approaches and ideas, including links to articles like “Libraries, Hackspaces and E-waste: how libraries can be the hub of a young maker revolution.”
Or this post, “From Stacks to Hacks: Makerspaces and Library Box”:
The makerspace movement is gaining momentum in the library world. In his recent report on “Libraries and the informational future: some notes,” Lorcan Dempsey of OCLC noted how “space is being reconfigured around broader education and research needs, and less around the management of print collection. In effect, space is shifting from infrastructure to engagement…” Nothing represents this emerging trend more than the recent growth of makerspaces within libraries.
For what’s going on locally, Asheville’s Makerspace is active on its Google group page and its Facebook page.
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