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Gearbox Recieves $90,000 Grant from The Lemelson Foundation

gearbox2The Lemelson Foundation, a funder of invention in service of social and economic change has injected a $90,000 grant into Gearbox, the ihub based space for markers to help its members prototype and manufacture world-class products that address the needs of underserved Africans.

The $90,000 grant will go to Ushahidi to allow it and its partners to launch Gearbox and reach a number of critical early milestones, such as incorporating with the IRS, hiring a CEO, and developing a business plan. Gearbox is a consortium of innovative local Kenyan companies including iHub, Ushahidi, BRCK and Sanergy.

In a ststement, Carol Dahl, executive director of the Lemelson Foundation, “We are thrilled to be early investors in Gearbox. We are confident that Gearbox will transform the environment for invention in East Africa. It will provide a much-needed space for inventors to talk, build, test and ultimately take their ideas to market. We anticipate that inventions born at Gearbox will make people’s lives better and bolster local economies for generations to come.”

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Based at the iHub, Gearbox aims to fills a critical need for a design and prototyping space in East Africa where there is a growing culture of designers, engineers and entrepreneurs but who lack skills training and access to quality tools and materials. As a result, the best local talent is often forced to design and develop abroad, which increases costs, delays innovation and spurs brain drain.

One of the would-be beneficiaries, Ani Vallabhaneni, co-founder of the Kenyan sanitation startup Sanergy, said, “The goal of our Fresh Life Toilet was to create a toilet that is affordable and accessible to people living in slums in Nairobi. But we encountered an unexpected setback when we moved to the region – there was no place locally to prototype new designs based on critical feedback from our users. Ultimately, our production manager had to return to the United States to access the tools and equipment we needed. This was a huge waste of time and resources,” explains Vallabhaneni. “Gearbox will allow African engineers, designers and companies like Sanergy to innovate in Africa.”

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Gearbox will support a 10,000 sq. foot workshop space outfitted with an industrial-grade wood shop, metal shop, modeling shop, electronics lab, and general fabrication shop. Additional space will be dedicated to co-working space, classrooms, offices and event space. Gearbox will also host world-class training with a variety of courses including wood and metal craftsmanship, design, electronics and entrepreneurship. Membership – set at several price tiers – will be open to the public.

Gearbox is inspired by the success of the technology sector in Kenya, and the central role that collaborative spaces and incubation services have played in that sector’s impressive growth. Nairobi is the tech hub of Africa, and home to companies such as the crisis crowd-sourcing platform Ushahidi, agricultural market price finder MFarm, and small business mobile payments provider KopoKopo. These and other companies started in a web of software incubators, the most prominent of which is iHub.

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“iHub provided the basis for Ushahidi’s achievements and the success of many other Kenyan companies, but there is no analogous space for inventors of physical things to come together, share ideas and build things,” confirms Juliana Rotch, co-founder of Ushahidi. “That’s why we – along with partners like iHub and Sanergy – have banded together to address this critical barrier to empowering people to share information that can improve lives.”

Apart from the Lemelson grant, the U.S. Global Development Lab of USAID is working on another grant for Gearbox.

 

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Sam Wakoba
Sam Wakobahttp://techmoran.com
Taking you on tour through Africa's tech and business ecosystem, one story at a time since 2010! Based out of Nairobi, Kenya, Sam is the founder and managing director of Moran Media, which runs  TechMoran.com, various other digital platforms and a startup incubation hub for Kenya's youthful entrepreneurs. Drop me a mail at [email protected]

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