This post by RCA President Colin Mills was originally published in Reston Patch.
As RCA president, I’ve seen and done a lot of unique and exciting things. On Saturday, I had one of my coolest experiences yet, as a delegation of RCA members and I visited one of Reston’s hidden gems. You’ve probably never heard of it, but it’s a place that exemplifies Reston’s spirit of creativity and experimentation. It’s called Nova Labs, and I think it’s a dream come true.
Nova Labs describes itself as a “makerspace.” What’s that? Think of it as a clubhouse for creative types. It provides people with a space to build things, kind of like a garage or a basement workshop. But Nova Labs offers two key advantages that a basement or garage doesn’t. For one thing, Nova Labs is stocked with an amazing array of tools that no one would have the space or money to maintain at home. Second, Nova Labs gives you the chance to interact with other makers. You can collaborate, learn how to do new things, and share ideas with like-minded folks. It’s an incubator for creation, and a chance to go beyond what you could do on your own.
I first heard of Nova Labs from RCA Board member Gary Thomas. He had visited with his son, and he kept telling me that RCA needed to check it out. So we arranged to tour the facility with Brian Jacoby, President of Nova Labs. We met at the unassuming storefront where the facility is located, tucked away near the Wiehle Metro station.
Brian explained to us how Nova Labs got started. A couple years ago, 12 friends who liked to build things kept talking about how they wished they had a space where they could work outside of the house. The more they talked about it, the more they wanted it to exist, until (in Brian’s words) they “double dared each other to do it.” And then they did it. Talk about an inventive spirit!
I could tell from the moment we met that Brian was excited to show us the facility. As soon as he took us inside, I could see why.
If you’re a creative type, walking into Nova Labs is like walking into a toy store. Just being there filled me with inspiration to experiment and invent. Once inside, Brian pointed out a light switch on the wall, inside a Plexiglas box containing some wiring. I thought it was neat-looking. But Brian explained that it was more than a light switch. When a member flips the switch, it updates the Nova Labs Web site and Twitter feed to let people know the facility is open to visit. How cool is that?
Brian took us around the different areas in the facility. He showed us the metalworking shop, the newly expanded woodshop, the classroom space, and the open tables for people to work on their projects. And he showed up the cool tools that Nova Labs has to offer. All of the their tools were either donated by sponsors or provided by members who owned the tools but didn’t have the space or the time to really get the use out of them. They have drill presses, table saws, CNCs (which allow you to do three-dimensional cutting), laser cutters, and more. (They also have safety and usage classes, so that people learn how to operate the machines responsibly.)
Perhaps my favorite tools at Nova Labs are the 3-D printers. You might have heard of this new technology; you might have even seen the demo that Nova Labs did at Reston Regional last year. If you’re not familiar, 3-D printing allows you to use an extruded material (plastic or metal or other things) to make three-dimensional objects using digital models. They’re used to make things from gears to clocks to jewelry to auto parts.
Brian showed us a couple of 3-D printers, and they were much smaller than I expected; you could lift one with one hand. Nova Labs received their first 3-D printer as a donation from a sponsor; they then used it to make parts to build new printers! Currently, there’s a group of 25 folks at Nova Labs who are making their own printers.
As soon as we left Nova Labs, our RCA delegation was talking about how we could work with them. We’ve come up with possibilities. Nova Labs is planning to hold a Maker Faire in 2014, and we are thinking of working with them to make it happen. Our Education Task Force looks at Nova Labs as a model for how hands-on learning might work in their Academic Village. (Nova Labs offers classes and education opportunities aimed at kids, to foster their love of science, technology, and creativity.) And since Nova Labs’ current facility is likely to be replaced within the next few years by Metro-related development, we’re on the lookout for a permanent home for them.
Reston has always been a creative community. We owe our very existence to Bob Simon’s desire to experiment and build a new kind of community, a place that was quite different from a typical suburb. Citizen groups like RCA built on that creative spirit, launching experiments like chartering a commuter bus service and pioneering a more active concept of “getting involved” in the community.
Now that we’ve matured and built out, there are fewer opportunities for community-wide creativity and experimentation. Projects like the Initiative for Public Art – Reston (IPAR) keep the spirit alive. But we need other outlets for the dreamers and the creators. Nova Labs is a perfect playground for people to create, to innovate, and to experiment.
Nova Labs provides a workspace and a community for people who like to make things. It’s open to inventors, programmers, electronics wizards, artists, crafters, or anyone who is interested in technology and creation. Places like this can help Reston maintain its reputation as a hotbed of creativity and experimentation. The next generation of Thomas Edisons, Bill Gateses, and Steve Jobses are getting their start right here.
I hope this post has inspired you to visit the Nova Labs website or, better yet, visit their facility to learn more. And I hope that Reston continues to foster places like Nova Labs, to keep our reputation as an innovative and creative community alive.
Wednesday, April 24, 2013
Tuesday, April 23, 2013
RCA's Accessibility Committee to be Honored by Fairfax County
The following is a message from the chair of RCA's Reston Accessibility Committee, Ken Fredgren. Congratulations to RAC for this well-deserved recognition of their hard work on behalf of people with disabilities.
The Fairfax County Department of Public Works and Environmental Services will honor Reston Accessibility Committee with its Building Safety Month Community Partnership Award. (May is Building Safety Month across the nation.)
For our service to be affirmed by these professionals is gratifying, especially considering their use of the words "safety," "community" and "partnership." For years RAC has been saying that accessibility improvements are needed as a safety measure, and our mission statement begins with the action verb "partnering" and includes the ideal, "community."
The presentation will be one of the opening items on the Fairfax County Board of Supervisors meeting agenda of Tuesday, April 30, in the Government Center. The meeting begins at 9:00 AM, and we would be delighted to see you there. If you have one of RAC's "Accessibility for All" buttons, please wear it.
The Fairfax County Department of Public Works and Environmental Services will honor Reston Accessibility Committee with its Building Safety Month Community Partnership Award. (May is Building Safety Month across the nation.)
For our service to be affirmed by these professionals is gratifying, especially considering their use of the words "safety," "community" and "partnership." For years RAC has been saying that accessibility improvements are needed as a safety measure, and our mission statement begins with the action verb "partnering" and includes the ideal, "community."
The presentation will be one of the opening items on the Fairfax County Board of Supervisors meeting agenda of Tuesday, April 30, in the Government Center. The meeting begins at 9:00 AM, and we would be delighted to see you there. If you have one of RAC's "Accessibility for All" buttons, please wear it.
Monday, April 22, 2013
RCA Thanks Supervisor Hudgins for Work on Wiehle Station Access
At their April meeting, the RCA Board of Directors approved a letter to Hunter Mill Supervisor Cathy Hudgins, thanking her for her recent action to improve access to the Wiehle Metro station. The text of the letter follows.
On behalf of the Reston Citizens Association, I would like to thank you for your recent actions to foster improved access to the Silver Line at the Wiehle – Reston East station. Like most Restonians, we are enthusiastic about the impending arrival of the Silver Line, and we are hopeful that your attention to the issue of station access will allow us to maximize our investment in mass transit.
Dear Supervisor Hudgins:
On behalf of the Reston Citizens Association, I would like to thank you for your recent actions to foster improved access to the Silver Line at the Wiehle – Reston East station. Like most Restonians, we are enthusiastic about the impending arrival of the Silver Line, and we are hopeful that your attention to the issue of station access will allow us to maximize our investment in mass transit.
In particular, we are pleased with the following action
items you have brought to the Board of Supervisors that will help Restonians
take advantage of Metro:
- A
request for $2.2 million for improved and expanded bus service to the
Wiehle – Reston East station, as well as a continuation of bus service to
the Pentagon and Crystal City
- Endorsement
by the Board of the need to improve access to the station from the south
side
- Direction
to the Department of Transportation to expedite planning for the
construction of the Soapstone crossing
Thank you again for your service and your action on behalf
of the citizens of Reston. If there is
any way that I or RCA can be of service in ensuring that these access
improvements are implemented, please do not hesitate to ask.
Colin Mills
President, Reston Citizens Association
Wednesday, April 17, 2013
Seeking Inspiration on Reston's Planning
This post by RCA President Colin Mills was originally published in Reston Patch.
If you made it out for the Founder’s Day celebration last Saturday, then you know what a terrific event it was. The weather was dazzlingly beautiful, providing a perfect backdrop for the ceremony. Our elected officials spoke in praise of Bob Simon and Reston. The South Lakes Theatre Arts kids did a couple songs from their spring musical. The Bobby Pins, a quintet of ladies from the Reston Chorale, sang “Restonation,” a song written to honor our community. We all sang “Happy Birthday” to Bob and enjoyed delicious cupcakes in the sunshine. A good time was had by all.
My daughter Leslie and I decided to try the scavenger hunt put together by the Reston Museum. We were handed a sheet containing clues to various locations around Reston, and we had two hours to visit them all. I loved that the hunt spotlighted some of Reston’s more obscure locations, places that even longtime Restonians might not have visited in years, or ever.
One such location was the Dag Hammarskjold Plaza. What’s that? It’s the plaza located behind the International Center and the Chili’s. Many Restonians have no idea it’s there. Sadly, it’s likely to be demolished when the Reston Heights development gets underway.
On the plaza is a plaque containing a quote from Dag Hammarskjold himself. (For those who don’t know, he was the second Secretary General of the United Nations.) The quote reads:
If you made it out for the Founder’s Day celebration last Saturday, then you know what a terrific event it was. The weather was dazzlingly beautiful, providing a perfect backdrop for the ceremony. Our elected officials spoke in praise of Bob Simon and Reston. The South Lakes Theatre Arts kids did a couple songs from their spring musical. The Bobby Pins, a quintet of ladies from the Reston Chorale, sang “Restonation,” a song written to honor our community. We all sang “Happy Birthday” to Bob and enjoyed delicious cupcakes in the sunshine. A good time was had by all.
My daughter Leslie and I decided to try the scavenger hunt put together by the Reston Museum. We were handed a sheet containing clues to various locations around Reston, and we had two hours to visit them all. I loved that the hunt spotlighted some of Reston’s more obscure locations, places that even longtime Restonians might not have visited in years, or ever.
One such location was the Dag Hammarskjold Plaza. What’s that? It’s the plaza located behind the International Center and the Chili’s. Many Restonians have no idea it’s there. Sadly, it’s likely to be demolished when the Reston Heights development gets underway.
On the plaza is a plaque containing a quote from Dag Hammarskjold himself. (For those who don’t know, he was the second Secretary General of the United Nations.) The quote reads:
That quote really stuck with me; I returned later that day to write it down. I’ve been reflecting on it in the days since. I believe this message could guide us as the Master Plan Task Force continues deliberating on the future of Reston.The qualities leadership requires are those which I feel we all need today: perseverance and patience, a firm grip on realities, careful but imaginative planning, a clear awareness of the dangers but also of the fact that fate is what we make it and that the safest climber is he who never questions his ability to overcome all difficulties.
Wednesday, April 10, 2013
The Waiting Game at Reston National
This post by RCA President Colin Mills was originally published in Reston Patch.
I have a confession: Golf is not my favorite sport. I love baseball (to play and to watch), I love hockey (to watch; I can’t ice-skate to save my life), I like tennis and basketball and plenty of other sports. Golf? Not my thing.
The main reason I don’t enjoy golf, as a player or spectator, is that it takes so long. Hit the ball, walk until you reach it, hit it again, walk after it again… lather, rinse, repeat for the better part of an afternoon. Perhaps if I someday achieve a professional stature such that golf is a regular part of my life, I will feel differently. For now, though, miniature golf is more my speed.
Even the slowest round of golf, though, has nothing on the saga over the Reston National golf course. The Board of Zoning Appeals hearing on the golf course, which had been set for May 22nd, has been postponed yet again, this time to September. This is the fourth time the hearing has been delayed. If the hearing actually does occur in September (which we have every reason to doubt, given the history), it will be a full year since the hearing was originally supposed to occur.
I’m all for due process, but this is ridiculous. At this point, I’m beginning to wonder which will take longer: the appeals process over Reston National, or the Master Plan revision process. The Master Plan process had a two-year head start, but Phase 1 is showing signs of grinding toward a conclusion, whereas the Reston National process has no apparent end in sight. (Remember that no matter which way the BZA rules, when and if it ever does, there’s a good chance that the decision winds up in court.) Also, the Master Plan process will determine the future of all of Reston, as opposed to the fate of a single golf course.
Why is this taking so long? Why do Reston National’s owners keep asking for delays? There are several theories floating around.
I have a confession: Golf is not my favorite sport. I love baseball (to play and to watch), I love hockey (to watch; I can’t ice-skate to save my life), I like tennis and basketball and plenty of other sports. Golf? Not my thing.
The main reason I don’t enjoy golf, as a player or spectator, is that it takes so long. Hit the ball, walk until you reach it, hit it again, walk after it again… lather, rinse, repeat for the better part of an afternoon. Perhaps if I someday achieve a professional stature such that golf is a regular part of my life, I will feel differently. For now, though, miniature golf is more my speed.
Even the slowest round of golf, though, has nothing on the saga over the Reston National golf course. The Board of Zoning Appeals hearing on the golf course, which had been set for May 22nd, has been postponed yet again, this time to September. This is the fourth time the hearing has been delayed. If the hearing actually does occur in September (which we have every reason to doubt, given the history), it will be a full year since the hearing was originally supposed to occur.
I’m all for due process, but this is ridiculous. At this point, I’m beginning to wonder which will take longer: the appeals process over Reston National, or the Master Plan revision process. The Master Plan process had a two-year head start, but Phase 1 is showing signs of grinding toward a conclusion, whereas the Reston National process has no apparent end in sight. (Remember that no matter which way the BZA rules, when and if it ever does, there’s a good chance that the decision winds up in court.) Also, the Master Plan process will determine the future of all of Reston, as opposed to the fate of a single golf course.
Why is this taking so long? Why do Reston National’s owners keep asking for delays? There are several theories floating around.
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