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Formlabs Partners with the Royal College of Art, Bringing 3D Printing to Creative Students

rca2The stories that I personally love to cover the most within the 3D printing space are those which focus on bringing the technology to students around the globe. These are our future leaders, creators, manufacturers and engineers. They are the ones who will be there for us when we are old, the ones who will advance technology to make our lives better. It is an obvious conclusion to me, as well as many others, that 3D printing will play a huge role in this future, so why not provide students with the necessary tools needed to succeed in this future environment?

Formlabs, the maker of the Form 1+ 3D printer gets this, as does the Royal College of Art in London. The two parties recently collaborated to host a design research course that explores the future of desktop manufacturing. The course looked into how 3D printing could shift the direction that the industrial design landscape is headed in the future. Students were able to experience 3D printing first hand as part of the program titled Benchtop Factory. This program was led by the RCA Senior Tutor, James Tooze as well as Formlabs designer, Yoav Reches, with hopes of allowing students to create products that could easily be 3D printed on a Form 1+ 3D printer. The students came up with some very innovative creations, which will be on display at the Victoria and Albert Museum on March 28, 2015.

“We developed Formlabs for designers and engineers to create new ideas,” explained Max Lobovsky, co-founder of Formlabs. “And we’re all trying to understand how 3D printing will change how we make and manufacture. So it was really inspiring for us to have these design students prototyping exploring new horizons on the Form 1+.”

Some of the incredible creations included:

These creations show that when 3D printing is provided to students, their ideas can be turned into a reality, a reality that someday might just change the world.

“What I was really impressed with was the spread of ideas,” said Dr. Sharon Baurley, Head of Programme, Design Products at the RCA. “The brief was about challenging the students to envision future benchtop manufacturing scenarios, and thinking about socio-cultural, political, technological changes to manufacturing.”

What do you think about what Formlabs and RCA did, in bringing 3D printing into the college classroom for students to see the potential that it provides? Discuss in the Formlabs/RCA collaboration forum thread on 3DPB.com. Check out the video below:

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