HackerspaceSG | |
Size: | 180px |
Type: | NGO |
Purpose: | Hackerspace |
Headquarters: | 336D King George's Avenue, King George's Building, Singapore 208572 |
Location: | Singapore |
Region Served: | Singapore |
Membership: | 50 |
Leader Title: | Origin |
Leader Name: | Singapore |
Leader Title2: | Platforms |
Leader Title3: | Founders |
Leader Name3: | Luther Goh Lu Feng, Wong Meng Weng, Chua Ruiwen, Justin Lee |
Leader Title4: | Products |
Website: | hackerspace.sg |
HackerspaceSG is a 1202square feet technology community center and hackerspace in Singapore.[1] While predominantly an open working space for software projects, HackerspaceSG is also a landmark of the Singapore DIY movement,[2] and also hosts a range of events from technology classes to biology, computer hardware, and manufacturing. The space is open to all types of hackers.
HackerspaceSG was initially founded by four people in late 2009. The four people came up with the idea after reading about similar centres that have opened up around the world, specifically in the United States, China and Japan. Wong Meng Weng envisioned HackerspaceSG as a spot where hackers and other geeks can congregate, exchange ideas and come up with cool applications, and where the clubhouse is a "combination of living room, science lab, and shared office space for the geek community".[3]
Though the plan was initially to just have a place for geeks to gather and network, this soon evolved into a co-working space catering mainly to tech startups.[4]
The institution has often been recognised as Singapore's first co-working space.[5] [6] [7] [8] [9] [10] During the Singapore start-up 2.0 boom, it was also touted in the mainstream media as a meeting space for the start-up and entrepreneurship communities,[11] [12] [13] even hosting Facebook's co-founder Eduardo Saverin when he was in Singapore.[14]
The first iteration of HackerspaceSG was located at 70A Bussorah Street in Singapore.[15] The 2-year lease was extended once, but in October 2013, the landlord expressed a desire to develop the Bussorah Street unit into two distinct units. This meant that members would have had to endure dust and noise, and it was unlikely that the units would be leased back to HackerspaceSG at existing rates when the lease was renewed.[16]
In October and November 2013, a search for a new location commenced, with the membership finally settling on 344B King George's Avenue.[17] A lease was signed on November 11, 2013, and move-in occurred on the next day.[18]
In November 2021, due to increasing rents and the COVID-19 pandemic, HackerspaceSG moved to a different unit within King George's Building, to its current address at 336D King George's Avenue.[19]
HackerspaceSG is a not-for-profit membership organisation,[20] with many chores and activities performed by self-directed member volunteers. Organisational decisions are proposed and discussed at monthly plenums, and decided mostly by consensus.[21] A board handles administration and government-mandated filings.
The organisation has open membership: anybody can become a member.[22] It is primarily financed through membership dues, but is open to accepting 3rd party sponsorships to fund expansions and renovations.
HackerspaceSG is entirely communal space, from the tools in the electronics lab, to the desks, to the food in the refrigerator. Anything left in the space is considered fair game for anybody to play with. Very few restrictions are placed upon people, as long as they do not detract from the experience of members or consume resources they do not replace.[23] Any member may host an event in the space.[24]
Some partnerships formed in HackerspaceSG have been the subject of controversy and media coverage, like the organisation of a nyotaimori event as a part of a series of themed dinners.[25] [26]