Windsor Star

Canadian startups seek cleaner world

- ALEXANDER PANETTA

NEW YORK — While hundreds of thousands of people marched against climate change in New York City, across town, two young Canadian entreprene­urs displayed an invention they hope might put a little dent in the global carbon footprint.

The business partners from Waterloo, Ont., took home a couple of the judges’ ribbons at a technology fair Sunday afternoon, as they showed off an adapter that allows homestyle 3D printers to work with additional materials.

Hooked up to one of these syringelik­e contraptio­ns, they say, a home unit is no longer confined to just printing plastic. Suddenly, a high-tech do-ityourself­er’s repertoire might include ceramic, wood filler, clay, hydrogels — pretty much any viscous substance that can be squeezed through a little tube, at room temperatur­e.

“Are you 3D printing Nutella?!” one woman burst out as she arrived at the display stand for Structur3D. Yes, in fact, they were. Playing to the local crowd, they’d even set up a 3D printer to draw a chocolatey replica of a New York Yankees logo. “We’re the first 3D company in the world to print using Nutella,” said Charles Mire, one of the two company co-founders who attended the Maker Faire event over the weekend. On the table a few metres away was a syringe filled with wasabi sauce, as he and partner Andrew Finkle tried to create some Japanese culinary art from that sinus-scorching root paste.

About 85,000 people attended the weekend event in Queens, organizers said. Across the East River, a much bigger crowd was marching in Manhattan to put pressure on government­s on the eve of a United Nations climate summit.

Mire made the point that his $379 gizmo also has serious applicatio­ns, beyond Nutella spreads. One of those happens to be environmen­tal — a buylocal movement, if you will, narrowed down to your own house. “It’s one less trip (people) have to make to the store. It’s one less thing they have to order off of the Internet,” Mire said.

The partners were already talking to other people at the fair about additional, serious applicatio­ns. Those people included volunteers at the E-nable project, which builds prosthetic limbs by crowdsourc­ing ideas and then printing them in 3D. They had a variety of models on display, to illustrate that the newest ones keep getting better.

The volunteers suggested a technology like the one from Ontario might improve things even more, in a couple of ways: first, by simplifyin­g the printing of fingertips with a better grip, and also by improving compatibil­ity with the wrist. “A big issue prosthetic users have is the interface between actual skin and product,” said one volunteer, Mohit Chaudhary. “Soft materials, like silicone or anything else that might be extruded, is a viable option to make it more comfortabl­e for the user.”

There are a few constraint­s to the printing technology — aside from the obvious requiremen­t of owning a $500-$1,000 home 3D machine. They can’t print metal, or anything that might have to be melted to squeeze through a tube. And they print slowly — which is fine for making the occasional widget, or a cake, or even a pro- totype for your business. Just don’t expect to transform your basement into some super-productive industrial assembly line.

When discussing his hopes for the technology, however, Mire raised another, quite ambitious idea: printing hydrogels to act as scaffoldin­g for new cells, so that organs might be grown and harvested more easily and, perhaps, save somebody’s life.

The team came together after Mire moved to Waterloo with his Canadian wife. He was born in Texas, and did a doctoral chemistry thesis in Australia that included building an extruder. Finkle had studied nanotechno­logy engineerin­g, and they spent a month working together on their new invention in Mire’s basement.

They founded their company last year, launched a Kickstarte­r campaign this June, and quickly sold 400 units of the Discov3ry Paste Extruder. They believe they might have sold three more in Queens over the weekend.

They aren’t the only startup entreprene­urs from their area making a name for themselves in New York lately. In a Brooklyn coffee shop this weekend, Jesse Guild explained how Blitzen.com went from being an idea he and a friend came up with in Kitchener-Waterloo, to a budding success story with 60 customers including Price water house Coopers, Mahindra, NASA, the U.S. army and Chevron.

They’d realized, with some frustratio­n, that even high-tech companies used archaic means of collecting data received through online forms.

So they built a program to deal with the problem, and help companies collect the data. Since then, they’ve built software that makes different data-management systems compatible with each other.

 ??  ?? ALEXANDER PANETTA/The Canadian Press Andrew Finkle and Charles Mire, the co-founders of Canadian startup Structur3D, show off the 3D printer adapter they used to create a New York Yankees
logo out of Nutella at the Maker Faire festival in Queens,...
ALEXANDER PANETTA/The Canadian Press Andrew Finkle and Charles Mire, the co-founders of Canadian startup Structur3D, show off the 3D printer adapter they used to create a New York Yankees logo out of Nutella at the Maker Faire festival in Queens,...

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Canada