Agbogbloshie Makerspace Platform (AMP)<\/a>, founded by Abbas and Osseo-Asare in Ghana. AMP is a youth-driven community-based project that couples the practical know-how of makers in the informal sector with the technical knowledge of students and young professionals in the science, technology, engineering, arts and mathematics (STEAM) fields to amplify inclusive innovation.<\/p>\n\tAbbas and Osseo-Asare\u2019s AMP project has received international attention, winning the Rockefeller Foundation\u2019s Centennial Innovation Challenge Award, being named the Africa 4 Tech Digital Champion for Educational Technology (EdTech) and the Design Corps Social Economic Environmental Design (SEED) Award for Public Interest Design. Most recently, the duo received seed funding via a Penn State College of Arts and Architecture faculty research grant to advance their \u201cspacecraft\u201d research around community-enabled materials design research, which is currently ongoing with a number of graduate and undergraduate students at the University Park campus.<\/p>\n
The pair traveled to Germany in November to install their third-generation AMP Spacecraft, which featured a \u201cbuilding performance\u201d wherein graduate students and faculty from the Karslruhe Institute of Technology participated in an experimental test build to provide feedback on Penn State students\u2019 design work to date. AMP Spacecraft is small-scale, incremental, low-cost and open-source, operating simultaneously as a set of tools and equipment to \u201ccraft space,\u201d and empowering makers with limited means to both navigate and terraform their environment. Made in Ghana by grassroots makers and shipped from the first AMP maker hub in Accra\u2019s Agbogbloshie scrapyard, the AMP Spacecraft prototypes a smart canopy device \u2013 or \u201cScanopy\u201d \u2013 that collects air quality data and explores opportunities to amplify environmental sensing in data-scarce regions.<\/p>\n
While in Germany, Abbas and Osseo-Asare presented the AMP project along with their on-going design research around maker ecosystems in African spaces during a \u201cTangana\u201d panel at the \u201cOpen Codes: The World as a Field of Data\u201d installation at ZKM. Panelists included makers from Ghana and Germany that discussed common trends in open-source maker and technology culture, as well as opportunities for bottom-up (democratic) innovation by leveraging citizen science initiatives and\/or models of open science.<\/p>\n
ZKM","Karlsruhe is the fourth-highest ranking museum in the world by ArtsFacts.net and houses both spatial arts, such as painting, photography and sculpture, and time-based arts, such as film, video, media art, music, dance, theater and performance. The \u201cAfricas in Production\u201d exhibit is now open and will remain on display until March 31, 2019.<\/p>"]