Advertisement

Header Utility Menu

  • Subscribe
  • Advertise
  • Contact Us
  • Events

LinkedIn Facebook Twitter Instagram Get Our App

  • Login

Virginia Business

Mobile Menu

  • Issues
  • Industries
    • Banking/Finances
    • Business Law
    • Commercial Real Estate
    • Economic Development
    • Education
    • Energy/Green
    • Federal Contracting
    • Government
    • Healthcare
    • Hotels/Tourism
    • Insurance
    • Ports/Trade
    • Small Business
    • Technology
    • Transportation
  • Regions
    • Central Virginia
    • Eastern Virginia
    • Northern Virginia
    • Roanoke/New River Valley
    • Shenandoah Valley
    • Southern Virginia
    • Southwest Virginia
  • Reports
    • Best Places to Work
    • Business Person of the Year
    • CEO Pay
    • Coronavirus 2020
    • Generous Virginians Project
    • Legal Elite
    • Most Influential Virginians
    • Maritime Guide
    • Site Locator
    • The Big Book
    • Virginia CFO Awards
  • Company News
    • For the Record
    • People
  • Opinion
  • Lists
  • Awards/Events
    • Diversity Leadership Series
    • Vote Now for Women in Leadership
    • Virginia 500
    • Legal Elite
    • CFO Awards
    • Big Book of Lists
    • 100 People To Meet
    • Best Places To Work
  • Virginia 500
    • Read the issue
    • Order a copy
    • Buy an award plaque
    • Nominate execs for 2021

Advertisement

Header Primary Menu

  • virginiabusiness.com
  • Subscribe
  • Advertise
  • About Us
  • Contact Us

Home News Regions Southern Virginia Martinsville facility promotes entrepreneurship

Martinsville facility promotes entrepreneurship

Published June 29, 2016 by Joan Tupponce

PHCC student Chris Wagoner demonstrates the 3-D doodler pen.
Photo courtesy Patrick Henry Community College

A community college facility promoting entrepreneurship in Southern Virginia has opened in Martinsville.

The Thomas P. Dalton IDEA Center officially opened in May in a three-story building in Martinsville’s Uptown neighborhood bought by the Patrick Henry Community College Real Estate Foundation.

The 20,520-square-foot facility is the result of a donation by the family of the late Thomas P. Dalton, who graduated from the community college in 1982 and earned a degree from Averett University in 1984. He died in 2012.

“His family wanted more of a presence of the college in our Uptown area,” says Jim Bove, the community college’s public relations and marketing manager. “It was a booming area for local businesses several decades ago. It fell on hard times and now a lot of the space in that area has been revitalized by local entrepreneurs.”

The building formerly housed Solid Stone Fabrics, which recently relocated to accommodate an expansion.

The IDEA center’s name stands for “Innovate, Design, Engineer, Accelerate.”  The facility houses the Fab Lab, a collaboration venture involving Patrick Henry Community College, the Martinsville-Henry County Economic Development Corp. and New College Institute. The program started in a 1,400-square-foot space in 2012.

“Now the lab has around 14,000 square feet in the IDEA Center,” says Matthew Wade, the program’s coordinator.

The Martinsville Fab Lab is part of a network of around 60 facilities around the country, which offer digital fabrication opportunities to companies trying to develop new products and technologies. The lab also is connected to other facilities worldwide through a system provided by the Massachusetts Institute of Technology (MIT), the originator of the Fab Lab concept.

The Martinsville lab’s equipment includes vinyl and laser cutters, a desktop mill, a computer numerically controlled router, 3-D printers and electronic workstations.

“You teach people how to use the equipment, and they can create something to solve a problem,” Wade says. “They can make prototypes and start something before they go to manufacturing.”

The lab’s 3-D printers work with a variety of materials and substances that include metal, powder, plastic filament and resin. “But the Fab Lab is more than just 3-D printers because they have limitations,” Wade says. “We can fabricate projects in the lab with many different materials using other machines.”

Related Stories

Virginia Business logo

Virginia Uranium opens office in Chatham

Virginia Business logo

Sawmill operation to expand in Pittsylvania County

Virginia Business logo

Applied Felts plans to expand in Henry County

Trending

Finance/Insurance: STEPHAN Q. CASSADAY

Finance/Insurance: PAUL B. MANNING

Federal Contractors/Technology: JASON PROVIDAKES

Education: ANNE M. KRESS

Artemis I to launch with help from Va. contractors

Sponsored Stories

Why is my Less Than Truckload (LTL) freight pricing going up and my service level going down?  

Beyond Juneteenth – How Capital One is Commemorating and Implementing Change

How We Help Your Business Operate Better

Before the Breach: Get Serious About Cyber Resilience

Professionals are Discovering What it Means to Live Uniquely in the Alleghany Highlands of Virginia

Riverside Logistics Celebrates 25th Anniversary!

Girls for a Change Empowers Black Youth for the Future Workforce

The Jackson Ward Collective is equipping Black-owned small businesses with the tools for success

Advertisement

Advertisement

Trending

Finance/Insurance: STEPHAN Q. CASSADAY

Finance/Insurance: PAUL B. MANNING

Federal Contractors/Technology: JASON PROVIDAKES

Education: ANNE M. KRESS

Artemis I to launch with help from Va. contractors

Sponsored Stories

Why is my Less Than Truckload (LTL) freight pricing going up and my service level going down?  

Beyond Juneteenth – How Capital One is Commemorating and Implementing Change

How We Help Your Business Operate Better

Before the Breach: Get Serious About Cyber Resilience

Professionals are Discovering What it Means to Live Uniquely in the Alleghany Highlands of Virginia

Riverside Logistics Celebrates 25th Anniversary!

Girls for a Change Empowers Black Youth for the Future Workforce

The Jackson Ward Collective is equipping Black-owned small businesses with the tools for success

Get Virginia Business directly on your tablet or in your mailbox!

Subscribe to Virginia Business

Advertisement

Advertisement

Footer Primary Menu

  • virginiabusiness.com
  • Subscribe
  • Advertise
  • About Us
  • Contact Us

Footer Secondary Menu

  • Industries
  • Regions
  • Reports
  • Company News
  • Events

Sign Up For Our Newsletter

Sign Up

LinkedIn Facebook Twitter Instagram Get Our App

Privacy Policy Cookie Policy

Footer Utility Menu

Copyright © 2023 Virginia Business. All rights reserved.

Site Maintained by TechArk