A student works with wood in a makerspace
Introductory Sculpture is one of several classes held inside The Hatchery. (Caitlin Cunningham)

Welcome to The Hatchery

Equal parts workshop, classroom, and creative playground, 自慰视频鈥檚 popular makerspace invites the community to try new tools, exchange ideas, and explore what鈥檚 possible

When Sarah Ryan 鈥26 was a sophomore, she moved into an eight-person suite with an attached kitchenette, and found herself in need of a cutting board. Instead of heading to a store or clicking 鈥淎dd to cart,鈥 Ryan walked across campus to , Boston College鈥檚 state-of-the-art makerspace, and made one herself. Two years later, the rectangular board, crafted from solid walnut using a CNC router, was still in regular use, and the list of projects Ryan completed continued to grow: from 3-D printed door stops and vases, to crocheted hats and beach bags, to a stained-glass rendition of Gasson Hall.聽

鈥淚 keep saying that, aside from living with my best friends, this is probably the thing I鈥檓 going to miss most about 自慰视频,鈥 said Ryan, a human-centered engineering major, in an interview during the spring semester. 鈥淚f I鈥檓 not in class or in my dorm, I鈥檓 at The Hatchery.鈥

A small makerspace once existed in the basement of Higgins Hall, but The Hatchery, which opened in 2022, is palatial by comparison. Spread across two floors in 245 Beacon Street, it houses just about every kind of machine and tool imaginable. There鈥檚 a fleet of 3-D printers (some smaller than a coffee maker, some larger than a minifridge), laser and vinyl cutters, a full woodshop, sewing area, screen printing equipment, and a water jet that can cut through titanium. Everything, including materials, is free for any student, faculty, or staff member to use, provided they complete the necessary training.

鈥淲e assume that everybody walking into this space for the first time has no prior experience,鈥 said Lucas Ewing, The Hatchery鈥檚 design and prototyping manager. 鈥淚 know some people are nervous if they don鈥檛 already know how to use the tools, but this is a school, it鈥檚 a place of learning. You can come here, make mistakes, learn from them, and take that knowledge with you.鈥

A group of students using sewing machines

The Hatchery's second floor sewing area. (Caitlin Cunningham)

Last year, more than 2,500 students used The Hatchery, nearly a sixth of the entire student body. Many were engineering, computer science, and art majors, who attend class in the prototyping studio or use the space to work on projects. Others came in to design merchandise for their clubs or bands, print posters for their dorm room walls, or use the sewing machines to upcycle vintage clothing. One student spent an entire year crafting a wooden stringed instrument, slightly smaller than a guitar; another spent a few hours designing and 3-D printing a towel hanger for his bathroom.

鈥淭here are people who come in with the most creative ideas,鈥 said Ryan, who was one of 48 yellow-aproned student employees at The Hatchery, helping peers with projects and training them to use machines. 鈥淚f I don鈥檛 know the answer to a question I鈥檒l encourage them to just try things out. Try it, tweak it, try again鈥攊t鈥檚 a nice low-pressure situation compared to so many other things in life.鈥澛

A student explaining how to use a woodworking tool

Sarah Ryan 鈥26 helping a classmate use The Hatchery's CNC router during the spring semester. (Matthew Healey)

When Lucas Schmidt and Leonard Alsleben of the Class of 2026 had an idea to start a company selling travel medical kits, their first stop was The Hatchery, where Alsleben spent an afternoon in the sewing studio making their first prototype: a compact navy blue zippered bag with an embroidered logo. The pair brought the bag to their first elevator pitch, held next door at the Shea Center for Entrepreneurship, where they secured funding to launch , which means 鈥渨ell-being鈥 in German (both Schmidt and Alsleben were born in Germany). After months of back-and-forth with manufacturers, their Weekender bag is now selling steadily on Amazon, and Schmidt and Alsleben are considering adding a second product.聽

Two students holding cloth bags next to an embroidery machine

Lucas Schmidt and Leonard Alsleben, founders of Wohlsein. (Matthew Healey)

鈥淭he Hatchery is such a great resource for entrepreneurship,鈥 Alsleben said. 鈥淚f you have an idea, you can come here and make it鈥攊t鈥檚 a great way to have something tangible that you can show potential investors.鈥澛

Unlike makerspaces at technical colleges or art schools, The Hatchery isn鈥檛 designed for a specific type of student. From the outset, its mission has been to foster a culture of collaboration, and to be a space where a student studying sculpture and another studying physical computing can work side by side. Its glass walls and open door policy encourage eavesdropping (even when classes are in session, students often wander in and out to work on projects).

鈥淲hen I was in elementary school, it was very much 鈥楰eep your eyes on your own page. If you look at anything that anybody else is doing that's cheating,鈥 but here it's very much the opposite,鈥 said Ewing. 鈥淲e鈥檙e all about the cross-pollination of ideas: look at what other people are doing and use that to build your own projects up further.鈥

Most of the projects created in The Hatchery are tangible items, like turned wooden bowls or screen-printed tote bags, but digital making is now supported as well. The spring semester marked the launch of a new Digital Prototyping Studio where community members can learn to use a range of design software, including Adobe Photoshop and Illustrator, Figma (used in web design), and Fusion and Blender (for designing 3-D models). 自慰视频 students, faculty, and staff sign up for free training sessions and then use the studio鈥檚 powerful computers to practice their skills.聽

Whether it鈥檚 digital tools or a bedazzler, 鈥渨e鈥檙e always adding stuff,鈥 laughed Erik Winkler 鈥25, The Hatchery鈥檚 communications coordinator, 鈥渢here's so much gadgetry here, it's crazy.鈥 The makerspace has ramped up its event calendar, offering workshops and open houses for students who want to learn a new skill or just take a creative study break. Not everyone has the time or desire to build an instrument from scratch, Winkler reasoned, but who wouldn鈥檛 enjoy the occasional evening with friends making stained glass art, or laser cutting stamps for custom stationery?聽

鈥淎s a student it can be hard to find time to do things that you're passionate about outside of academics,鈥 said Winkler, 鈥渂ut I think it would be a shame for someone to leave 自慰视频 without ever walking in here. There are so many resources, so much knowledge鈥攁nd all you have to do is ask for it.鈥

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