If you take a look at the café’s chalkboard menus, you won’t see any pastries or sandwiches, but you will find a variety of hot beverages, from lattes to chai to hot chocolate. You can also take a look at the rates for using one of the café’s 3D printers. It’s a smart way to get people interested in new technologies: combine the learning experience with coffee and a friendly atmosphere.On CBC Radio’s ‘Saskatoon Morning’, Create Cafe’s co-founder Dustin Maki said, “I’ve always seen the ‘internet cafe’ model as giving people access to technology that was kind of new and up and coming.”
Maki said, “Having a comfortable cafe definitely opens the doors to more people to experience what 3D printing is about.”
Create Cafe favors MakerBot 3D printers, but according to owner/operator Randy Janes, they also have the largest 3D printer in North America on site in the café – the Printtron.
Janes said, “We can literally print you a full size boat, you can put a motor in it and take it in the water.”
If you don’t feel the need to 3D print a boat, but are still interested in taking a look at the Printtron, it’s on display in the Create Cafe, so you can watch it while it works. This large scale 3D printer prints objects in meters, as opposed to millimeters, and according to the Create Cafe website, it is “capable of build volumes never seen before in Canada.”
It will only cost you $15 per hour to use one of the café’s three MakerBot printers (for PLA and ABS material use only), and you can purchase 3D printing filaments and supplies in the café. The café also has WiFi, and there are two available computer stations, complete with modeling software, so you can work on your designs or file preparation while enjoying an espresso. They know that the café will likely attract a significant number of hobbyists who want to 3D print the classic Yoda figurine, but Maki and Janes hope that the Create Cafe will attract local businesses who want to save money.“One of the things that 3D printing does, especially for industry is it offers them an affordable way to do prototyping,” said Maki. “If you’re a company that’s trying to get through these difficult times and you have to do some sort of R and D we’re definitely a good fit.”
The members of the Create Cafe team want to bring 3D printing all across Canada, and continue building on the global open-sourced projects that gave the consumer printer revolution its start. The team members have various backgrounds in sales, design, machining, and mechanical and electrical engineering, so they are able to complete a full product cycle in days. They plan on offering both beginner and advanced 3D modeling and printing workshops later this year.
They also create custom inventory, focused mostly on professional gaming, in the café’s Create Forge division. All of their custom merchandise requires the creation of an initial 3D logo file for the company (one-time cost of $65), and then Create Forge can make custom team or personal merchandise, which is perfect for promotional branding or even gifts. Create Cafe’s corporate services include:- Consultation services: $100/hour, by appointment
- 3D printing design services: $100-$150/hour
- Prototyping services: $20/hour + materials and set-up
- Event services: Create Cafe will supply 3D printers and materials for corporate events, and also design a custom piece that represents your organization
- Large-scale printing with the Printtron
You can also check out what Create Cafe calls the “world’s most 3D printed 3D printer,” their affordable consumer YXE3D SLA 3D printer, which just opened for pre-sales earlier this month — helmed by CEO/Founder Dustin Maki.
Discuss in the Create Cafe forum at 3DPB.com.
Watch their video to learn more:
[Source: CBC News]