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Racing Against Time

麻豆传媒在线鈥檚 MIX Lab is innovating to deliver thousands of face shields to COVID-19 front line workers

Posted in: Arts, University

Close view of student cutting elastic ribbon
Team assembles masks at the 麻豆传媒在线 Innovation Lab, 10 Lackawanna Plaza, 麻豆传媒在线. The Lab is home of the Feliciano Center for Entrepreneurship & Innovation's soon-to-be launched off-campus incubator.

When 麻豆传媒在线鈥檚 MIX Lab team started producing face shields on 3D printers amid the growing COVID-19 pandemic, they quickly realized it wasn鈥檛 enough. The team needed to figure out how to make more 鈥 and fast.

鈥淭he need for PPE (personal protective equipment) is at scale,鈥 says Iain Kerr, co-director, with Jason Frasca, of the MIX Lab and professor of Innovation Design. Kerr reports that in northern New Jersey alone, the demand is for hundreds of thousands of face shields, if not more.

鈥淭he U.S. needs 3.5 billion masks. And this region 鈥 the megalopolis from Boston to Washington, D.C. 鈥 needs over 200 million shields,鈥 says Kerr. 鈥3D printing 350 a day was not the way to go.鈥

The, founded in 2015 and housed in 麻豆传媒在线鈥檚 (FCE&I), is a facility where students and community members work together to solve problems using innovation and digitally mediated 鈥渕aking鈥 鈥 aka 3D printing.

To address the need for better design and process in making mass quantities of face shields, the MIX Lab has joined with /DesignShed and of William Paterson University. The team is now collaborating on everything from research to design to supply chain management to hospital interface, volunteer recruitment, social media outreach and fundraising.

On the design end, the result of the collaboration is new open-source face shields that can be produced more cheaply (potentially less than $1/unit as compared to more than $5/unit) and faster than those the MIX Lab was 3D printing. 鈥淲e have two designs, one closed at top and one open,鈥 says Kerr. 鈥淭hey鈥檙e both super cheap.鈥

He says the designs use 鈥渧ery little 3D printing and a ton of ingenuity.鈥

Altarik Banks 鈥18, innovation and design researcher for the MIX Lab.

鈥淵ou can literally make these face shields with scissors and a hole punch and some binding covers and elastic streamers,鈥 says Altarik Banks 鈥18, innovation and design researcher for MIX Lab and design principal of the collective design studio HOMA.

Banks credits team member Alex McDonald for many of the improvements. 鈥淚n terms of production, now we have them cut in a streamline process. There’s a drill press, a jig, a paper cutter,鈥 he says.

Currently, the team has converted the 麻豆传媒在线 Innovation Lab at Lackawanna Plaza into an assembly line where 麻豆传媒在线 Design Week is coordinating volunteers. 鈥淲hen the machine works perfectly, we can get over 1,000 shields a day out the door 鈥 and they are what the hospitals want,鈥 Kerr says.

Meanwhile, the 3D printers have been freed up for specialty projects.

By the end of April, more than 15,000 face shields had been delivered 鈥 with more in production 鈥 to RWJBarnabas Health, University Hospital, St. Joseph鈥檚 Regional Medical Center in Paterson, Mountainside Hospital, Hackensack University Medical Center Palisades, The Valley Hospital in Ridgewood, and 麻豆传媒在线 Emergency Medical Services.

Wide view of students working while standing apart
The MIX Lab received special permission to remain open and is practicing appropriate social distancing throughout the work. Shown from left, Altarik Banks, Alex McDonald and Iain Kerr.

The only components needed are more money and more volunteers 鈥撀燼nd that is changing fast.

鈥淲e can fabricate the pieces at 1,500 per hour,鈥 Kerr says. 鈥淚f we had the materials and we had a volunteer force available, we could be making a huge amount.鈥

To make that happen, the University has set up a . In addition, the Feliciano Center reallocated $10,000 in 3D printing supplies no longer needed for educational purposes as a result of the transition to an online delivery model and received $17,000 in donations, 100% of which will be used to purchase materials.

The lab has received generous support from some of the University’s supporters, including The Provident Bank Foundation and alumnus Joe Cucci ’66.

“How does a regular person like me help in a pandemic? My support for this effort helped make 1,684 face shields to provide to three hospitals in New Jersey including the one where me and my siblings were born,鈥 says Cucci. 鈥淚t is a great thing to be able to do.”

Beyond its own assembly line, the MIX Lab team is working to coordinate the makers鈥 community across New Jersey utilizing a Facebook page ().

鈥淲e鈥檙e trying to get people to switch to this family of designs. It sounds kinda cool to have this 3D high tech method, but if you move to this simpler method, you can make thousands,鈥 says Kerr.

鈥淧art of our mission is to innovate as well as collaborate with others 鈥 whether that be the global makers鈥 community or local higher education,鈥 says Feliciano School of Business Clinical Specialist and MIX Lab Co-Director Jason Frasca. 鈥淲e want to move people to better, faster designs.鈥

鈥淐ore to the Center鈥檚 work is collaboration with a rich ecosystem of global and local talent that helps blur the line between where MSU鈥檚 campus ends and where the entrepreneurial community begins,鈥 says FCE&I Executive Director Carley Graham Garcia. 鈥淚t is this innovation that got noticed by local hospitals and health care providers as COVID-19 began to rapidly spread around the world and in our own backyard.鈥

Says Banks, 鈥淚t’s really powerful and really impactful that our product is reaching the front line workers. I’m really excited about it.鈥

To help the MIX Lab protect those on the front lines, visit the .听

Completed set of facemasks
MIX Lab and partners aim to produce more than 1,000 face shields per day to meet demand at the front lines of the COVID-19 battle.

Story by Staff Writer聽Mary Barr Mann.