Makers of Our National Pastime: Lessons for Cities From Louisville -- the Birthplace of the Slugger

We are all "makers." We dream. We tinker. We design. We develop. We trouble-shoot and we deploy. Across industry -- public, private or government -- we're all making something; we're all part of the maker movement.
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We are all "makers." We dream. We tinker. We design. We develop. We trouble-shoot and we deploy. Across industry -- public, private or government -- we're all making something; we're all part of the maker movement.

I participated in a recent panel at Governing's Performance and Innovation Summit in Louisville with leaders from Living Cities, Philadelphia's Office of New Urban Mechanics and the Louisville Mayor's Office. It struck me that there are also civic makers, who are tinkering with our neighborhoods, our communities, and the things that make our cities exciting.

Throughout the panel, we returned to more and more examples of technology and tools that further democratize civic engagement. And it's not just San Francisco, Chicago and New York. We found examples everywhere of makers energizing the social and economic fabric of our cities. And the question we grappled with as a panel was how partners and those from within the maker movement can lead to lasting social impact.

Louisville, the wonderful host of the conference and the birthplace of The Slugger, is a veritable glimpse of the maker movement's history. The legendary baseball bat began humbly when Bud Hellerich saw a player break his bat during a game over 100 years ago. After the game, Bud took the player to his father's woodworking shop where they designed a new bat together.

Bud was enthusiastic, his father was impressed and he stepped aside to encourage his son's "making". Word quickly traveled: Players came by the dozens to the family's wood shop. The likes of Honus Wagner, Babe Ruth and the reigning World Series Champion San Francisco Giants have all used Louisville Sluggers. Today, the factory produces nearly 2 million bats annually. A walk through the factory is a walkthrough the history of innovation of our great nation -- the company's traditional bat-making methods now enhanced by a one-of-a-kind computer that produced consistency from every order. The new technology emerged from an iterative process which tested, tried, and developed each successive produce -- that's the maker process.

Louisville also offers great examples of the civic maker movement today. When Mayor Greg Fisher hosted a conference a few years back on the maker movement, his idea was that government should be supportive of innovation and encourage entrepreneurs. At the same time the government, understandably, will not lead the innovation. Ted Smith, Louisville's Chief Innovation Officer, shared a little insight with me as to how Louisville added the "civic" into the makers' movement.

It started when GE opened its doors to makers and entrepreneurs in 2013. As a result, community members and government staff came to the table too. This was an unprecedented moment signaling new ways for corporate and community to work together to spur new products, grow the local talent pool and encourage more public-private cooperation. With cross-sector partners at the table -- government, corporate, academe, and community -- the effort set in motion a wave of activity which according to Smith "culminated in a GE joint venture with Local motors -- called FirstBuild" -- located at the University of Louisville-Belknap Campus.

In addition to the efforts the city leadership supported, the nonprofit WaterStep organized Hack2O, a Water Solutions hack-a-thon to innovate clean water solutions in global communities.

So what can cities learn from Louisville?

One, leaders need to create a safe place for people to test and try new ideas, sometimes fail. Bud needed his father's permission to craft, develop and test out different baseball bats. FirstBuild came from Mayor Fisher, GE and other leaders letting the makers see where their innovations took them as they worked across sectors in new ways.

Secondly, the big, game-changing things we are pursuing take partnerships. Without the baseball player in the workshop with him, Bud wouldn't have gotten the Slugger right. Similarly, GE needed to bring community members in before the idea for FirstBuild came out.

Near the end of my tour of Slugger on historic West Main, my tour guide shared a story about Ted Williams, the Hall of Famer and last MLB player to hit .400. Apparently, Williams was particularly particular about his bats. He ordered the same bat over and over. But one time, Williams sent a bat back because "it didn't grip right." They checked the order, and it was made just like the previous ones, but when they measured it, sure enough, it didn't match. There's nothing like the hands of the batter to tell if the bat's right and there's lots of work to do. Imagine if our cities had that similar ability to listen, to tinker, to trouble shoot and to deploy. Our making continues.

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