
Bambu Lab has partnered with Chinese family entertainment brand meland to launch the first 3D printing creativity center for children in Shenzhen.
Hardware
Originally reported by VoxelMatters
Bambu Lab has partnered with Chinese family entertainment brand meland to launch the first 3D printing creativity center for children in Shenzhen. Located at the MixC World shopping mall, the facility features an interactive CyberBrick city installation and an educational zone equipped with Bambu Lab A1 FDM/FFF printers. The center offers structured courses for children aged five to 12, teaching design and additive manufacturing workflows using tablets and desktop hardware. Staff at the location have received specialized training from Bambu Lab to facilitate the curriculum, which spans from basic machine operation to independent model creation.
This partnership represents a strategic move by Bambu Lab to increase brand visibility and consumer adoption within the Chinese retail market. By integrating FDM/FFF hardware into a high-traffic family entertainment environment, the company is targeting early-stage STEM education to build long-term brand loyalty. This approach differentiates Bambu Lab from industrial-focused competitors by positioning its hardware as an accessible, user-friendly tool for creative expression rather than solely an engineering utility. The move aligns with broader trends of democratizing additive manufacturing through simplified software interfaces and automated hardware.
For Bambu Lab, the success of this model depends on the scalability of the educational curriculum and the durability of the A1 hardware under high-frequency public use. The company must ensure that the user experience remains seamless to avoid technical friction that could discourage young users. This initiative serves as a practical test for the viability of permanent, retail-based additive manufacturing education centers in high-density urban markets.
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