From first spark to full flight
Ten years ago, Case Âé¶čÓł»âs makerspace opened its new seven-story home with a bold mission: to make innovation radically accessible to everyone.
Today, the Larry Sears and Sally Zlotnick Sears think[box] is a remarkable success story. Last year alone, it welcomed nearly 81,000 visits from 5,532 campus and community membersâincluding half of CWRUâs undergraduates.
They arrive with questions, ideas, blueprints, or nothing at all. What they leave with is sometimes harder to measure.
âNot everything built here is physical,â said Claire Dorsett, Sears think[box]âs executive director. âJust as often, itâs confidence. Itâs resilience. Itâs the mindset to keep coming back and trying when something is unfamiliar or hard.â
Open to the public, the fully renovated 50,000-square-foot space in the Richey Mixon Building is the largest university-based innovation center of its kind in the country. That open-access, everything-under-one-roof modelâwhich includes free training and machine timeâis unusual. And that helps foster a humming, collaborative environment.
"The whole space is built around access,â said Tiffany Cashon, Sears think[box]âs senior director of strategic partnerships and business development. âIf youâve got an idea and a little curiosity, weâll help you figure out the rest.â
That approach helped launch dozens of ventures that have collectively raised more than $400 million in new funding from outside investors. But just as often, the real return is the know-how and determination to build what comes next.
A longtime Case Âé¶čÓł» trustee and former adjunct professor of electrical engineering, Sears is a steady presence in the innovation center he helped bring to life.
Floor 1: Community and Opportunity
The first floor offers a welcoming entry point and hosts speakers, pitch competitions, and programs for the campus and community. âWe designed it so people could see themselves here,â said Ainsley Buckner, the makerspace director.
That includes Cleveland artist , a longtime Sears think[box] user who works with laser engravers, computer-guided mills and other advanced tools upstairs to produce custom wooden shoeboxes for clients including musician Missy Elliott and actor Chris Rock. Soon after the first floor opened in 2023, Crawford mounted an art show in the gallery there that drew hundreds. He now runs regular programs through his nonprofit, , bringing area youth into the makerspace to teach them to use its tools.
âI didnât know how to do any of this when I started,â Crawford said. âBut I stuck with itâand now I pass on my knowledge to kids who need an outlet for their artistic ideas and creativity.â
For Buckner, thatâs the intent: The space âturns access into belonging.â
Campus and community members explore innovation at Sears think[box] through classes, workshops and individual creations, and by participating in pitch competitions and on project teams.
Campus and community members explore innovation at Sears think[box] through classes, workshops and individual creations, and by participating in pitch competitions and on project teams.
Campus and community members explore innovation at Sears think[box] through classes, workshops and individual creations, and by participating in pitch competitions and on project teams.
Campus and community members explore innovation at Sears think[box] through classes, workshops and individual creations, and by participating in pitch competitions and on project teams.
Floor 2: Collaboration and Creative Thinking
On the Wyant Collaboration Floor, ideas sprawl across whiteboards, rough prototypes cover tables, and users huddle in loose circles. The floor also supports everything from summer camps to ceramics club meetups. Itâs a bright, flexible space full of materials to help people begin figuring out what to build and how.
Each semester, students use the floor to tinker, experiment and collaborateâwhether on their own or in courses that treat the space as a classroom. In the introductory engineering course âFoundations of Engineering and Programming,â for example, students work on increasingly challenging hands-on projects, often with few directions.
âThatâs the point,â said Kurt Rhoads, PhD, an associate professor at Case School of Engineering who directs the Roger E. Susi First-Year Undergraduate Engineering Experience. âEngineers deal with unknowns. They have to make something out of ambiguity.â
Toward the end of each semester, students design and race vehicles equipped with biologically inspired âwhegs,â which are wheel-leg hybrids meant to mimic how animals move.
The competition unfolds over an obstacle course at Sears think[box] that blends clever design with pure spectacle.
âItâs hilarious and fun,â Rhoads said. âBut itâs also real engineering. Students are solving problems, testing ideasâand theyâre having a blast doing it.â
Floor 3: Prototyping and Possibility
On the Prentke Romich Floor, ideas start taking form with the aid of student technicians who help hundreds of visitors annually. The floor hums with 3D printers, vinyl cutters, soldering irons, embroidery machines and rows of laser cutters.
Some projects result in the creation of practical tools. Others evoke entire worlds, as students build scale models for theatrical productions with foam core, matte board, plywood and filament.
, MFA, an associate professor of theater, remembers when her approach to teaching scenic design changed. A student in a class mentioned his plans to cut model pieces at Sears think[box].
Curious, Davis visited. âI saw what was possible,â she said. âAnd I thought, âWhy arenât we all doing this?ââ
Now, the makerspace is a cornerstone of her âScenic Designâ course. Each semester, students create two miniature sets using precise cutting tools and 3D-printed details like tiny staircases.
âIt gives them the tools to experiment, push boundaries and see themselves as real designers,â Davis said.
Davis and her students have also used the makerspace to fabricate props and architectural elements for productions. One student even 3D-printed monkey-shaped wall sconces as a cheeky stage detail for The Drowsy Chaperone.
âDesign isnât just Âé¶čÓł» filling space,â Davis said. âItâs Âé¶čÓł» shaping the emotional world of a play; think[box] gives us the tools to build that world.â
Floor 4: Fabrication and Realization
The Lubrizol Foundation and Kent H. Smith & Kelvin Smith Fabrication Floor is home to advanced, heavy-duty equipment for woodworking, metalworking and welding. Hundreds of undergraduate engineers come to the floor annually for a rite of passage: They make a hammer to learn the fundamentals of fabrication.
For Rucha Batchu, who graduated in May, it also became a creative and intellectual home. She began as a third-floor prototyping technician, but with support from staff and peers, Batchu started working with the fourth floorâs industrial tools, eventually building furniture for her home.
âI like projects that feel like puzzles,â said Batchu (CWRU â25; GRS â25, mechanical engineering). âAnd think[box] gave me the space to figure them out.â
She used that freedom to pursue a masterâs-degree project: designing and building a treadmill for small robots as a way to better understand animal movements.
That spirit of exploration also shaped her work as a teaching assistant for an introductory engineering course, where she watched students go from intimidated to excited. âSome people walk in thinking they donât belong in a [shop] space,â she said. âBut once they build somethingâeven something smallâyou can see it click. They want to do more.â
Floor 5: Project Space and Precision
From rockets and off-road vehicles to remotely operated underwater robots, student design and competition teams create ambitious projects on the Eric T. Nord Project Space Floor. With dedicated bays, long-term storage and access to tools across the floors, it offers the space to build, test, fail and try againâtogether.
For Amitan Bar-Evan, a third-year mechanical engineering student and president of the student robotics club, the fifth floor is where ideas come to life. She and her teammates spend months designing, machining, assembling and refining their robotsâincluding a fully submersible ROV (remotely operated vehicle) that earned first place in the Explorer Class at the international 2025 , besting 26 teams from other universities.
âWe built the whole thing from scratch ⊠spending hours machining parts and then testing buoyancy, pressure seals and balance in campus pools,â she said. âEach time something didnât work, weâd figure it out at think[box].â
Floor 6: Entrepreneurship and Impact
Officially named the Cloud L. Cray Jr. and Sally Hunter Cray Center for Venture Creation, the sixth floor supports several CWRU startup resources, including the Sears think[box] expert-in-residence program and workshops led by LaunchNET and the Veale Institute for Entrepreneurship.
âAt Sears think[box], students donât have to go far to connect,â said Michael Goldberg, the Veale Instituteâs executive director. âWhat starts as a casual conversation can turn into a prototype, a pitch or a path forward.â
For Ignas âIggyâ Kamugisha, the environment supportedâand expandedâhis vision. Before coming to CWRU, the native of Tanzania created an organization called to broaden access to computer science education in Swahili. He initially traveled from one village to another, bringing laptops to rural schools.
âBut when we left,â he said, âthe momentum left, too.â
Then he discovered Sears think[box] onlineâand thatâs why he applied to Case Western Reserve. âI knew I needed a place like this,â he said. âA place where people could experiment, learn and belong.â
Kamugisha quickly immersed himself in the Sears think[box] ecosystemâvolunteering, prototyping, leading tours and later working as a student technician.
âPeople were helping each other, learning together,â said Kamugisha, now a third-year student. âIt made me ask: Why canât we have this where Iâm from?â
With guidance from campus mentors and backing from foundations, Kamugisha created âa makerspace in Tanzania inspired by Sears think[box]. It opened last year in a renovated house and offers access to 3D printers, laptops, mentorship and a sense of belonging.
âWeâve seen students go from never using a computer to getting scholarships abroad,â he said. âThatâs the kind of transformation we wantâwhere opportunity doesnât depend on luck.â
Floor 7: Incubation and Ascent
On the top floor, entrepreneurial ambition takes shape. Home to the Sears think[box] business incubator and Veale Institute for Entrepreneurship, the space offers dedicated offices and access to the six floors of tools and talent below.
The incubator has supported more than a dozen ventures mainly led by students, faculty or alumni. Many draw funding from public and private sources. Collectively, theyâve created nearly 100 paid positions for CWRU students and alumni.
One of the most visible successes is Path Robotics, co-founded by brothers Alex Lonsberry (CWRU â09; GRS â12, mechanical engineering) and Andrew Lonsberry (GRS â21, mechanical engineering).
They began creating their artificial-intelligence-powered robotic welding systems on the lower floors of Sears think[box], then spent nearly two years in the incubator refining key components: optical sensors, computer vision models and robotic controllers. They had room to test, fail, iterateâand eventually win their first industrial contract.
âthink[box] gave us our own space, the tools, the softwareâthe foundational stuff we couldnât have afforded otherwise,â Alex Lonsberry said. âWe created the first version of everything there.â
That foundation proved catalytic. Now based in Columbus, Path Robotics has raised more than $300 million in venture funding and employs more than 170 peopleâincluding five other CWRU alumni. Its autonomous welders are deployed across North America in infrastructure, transportation and energy manufacturing settings, and the company is expanding into international markets.
âWithout think[box], we would not be where we are today,â Alex Lonsberry said.
Itâs that CWRU-nurtured environmentâambitious, collaborative and hands-onâthat defines Sears think[box].
âEveryone here is building something different,â Dorsett said. âBut what unites them is a willingness to experiment, take risks, fail and keep going. Theyâre chasing progress, not perfectionâand thatâs where the magic happens.â
Photographs by Daniel Lozada