UMass Lowell has been granted $11.3 million to establish a Fabric Discovery Centre and to support its industry partnerships. The state award, $10 million to create a hub where researchers and industry can collaborate on smart fabrics and $1.3 million to support a trio of projects, sets the stage for Lowell’s emergence as a 21st-century textile powerhouse.
“Massachusetts is a competitive player in the global innovation economy because of our leadership in technology, strong workforce and educational institutions. This investment will ensure we continue to see that success and growth outside of Greater Boston, and that Lowell will have an opportunity to return to the centre of the textile industry,” Governor Charlie Baker said.UMass Lowell has been granted $11.3 million to establish a Fabric Discovery Centre and to support its industry partnerships. The state award, $10 million to create a hub where researchers and industry can collaborate on smart fabrics and $1.3 million to support a trio of projects, sets the stage for Lowell's emergence as a 21st-century textile powerhouse.#
It’s been decades since the city’s mills hummed, but the state award - $10 million to create a hub where researchers and industry can collaborate on next-generation smart fabrics and $1.3 million to support a trio of projects with industry partners S12 Technologies and Raytheon - sets the stage for Lowell’s emergence as a 21st-century textile powerhouse.
According to the Baker administration, the funding will allow UMass Lowell to acquire the specialised equipment needed to develop materials that can be used in flexible, hybrid electronics. Combined with more than $2 million in federal and industry funds for these projects, the investments will help spur future innovations and provide the resources to bring new technology from concept to commercialisation.
Baker made the announcement at the university’s Innovation Hub, a renovated manufacturing building in downtown Lowell. The building’s third and fourth floors now house the university’s two business incubators - the Innovation Hub and the Massachusetts Medical Device Development Centre (M2D2). The state funding will be used to transform the first and second floors of the building into the Fabric Discovery Centre.
There will be room for prototyping and testing next-generation materials, a start-up incubator for emerging businesses and space for workforce development efforts. There will even be space in which fashion entrepreneurs can create runway-ready fabrics.
The space-age fabrics that officials envision are largely “smart” fabrics, with sensors and communications features, said Julie Chen, vice chancellor for research and innovation at UMass Lowell. The high-tech inventions can be woven into designs to do everything from detecting dehydration in soldiers to monitoring buildings for leaking pipes, she said.
“With our ongoing leadership in the development of advanced fibres and textiles, medical textiles and flexible electronics, the announcement continues UMass Lowell’s strong partnership with Advanced Functional Fabrics of America, NextFlex, the US Army and the Commonwealth to build the future of high-tech manufacturing in Lowell and across the nation,” said UMass Lowell Chancellor Jacquie Moloney.
UMass president Marty Meehan said the university’s roots date back to 1895 as the Lowell Textile Institute, an institution founded to educate workers who came to the Mill City for the textile boom.
“It takes partnership, and there’s not a community that does partnership the way Lowell does,” said Meehan, noting the “innovation ecosystem” - a critical mass of entrepreneurs, startups, university researchers and creative talent - that has developed in the city. Not only will industry have access to the university’s research and business development support, but also a pipeline for highly skilled workers, he said.
The Fabric Discovery Centre is a perfect fit for the innovation hub, where concepts, in the hands of small business, move from idea to industry. (SV)
Fibre2Fashion News Desk – India