New STEAM Studio ‘pop-up’ lab planned for Rockhurst library along Troost
May 3, 2018 | Tim Linn
With its quiet atmosphere and stacks of source materials, the bottom floor of the Greenlease Library at Rockhurst University is a great place to study or do research. But it doesn’t necessarily strike one as a state-of-the-art design thinking and learning lab — yet.
Starting this summer, that section of the university’s library will be redesigned and outfitted with new furniture and technology like 3D printers as part of its transformation into a STEAM Studio pop-up.
An initiative launched in 2015 by Mandi Sonnenberg, associate professor of education at Rockhurst, along with architecture firm Gould Evans, STEAM Studio promotes design thinking and other innovation-centered learning skills in K-12 students through activities in science, technology, engineering, arts, math and science. Since that launch, Gould Evans has played host to STEAM Studio in its Westport offices.
The pop-up is an extension of the work already happening at the original space, not a replacement. It will be a shared workspace that can open a new range of possibilities and directions for STEAM Studio, including new educational partners close to campus, said Jennifer Friend, dean of the College of Health and Human Services at Rockhurst University who made the announcement Wednesday at the program’s annual luncheon.
“You will have the same kinds of STEAM Studio activities that will continue to happen at Gould Evans, but we will be right on Troost and have the opportunity to expand to even more students,” she said.
Sonnenberg said she is excited about the opportunity introduce even more flexibility into the STEAM Studio model and to expand the program’s impact to the community around campus.
“To me this feels like coming home,” she said. “This was always our vision to have a space here, so I’m really excited to have a second location at Rockhurst.”
Sonnenberg said they’re not waiting to start using it. Modular furniture — designed to foster collaboration — is already being moved in. Further equipment and construction is scheduled for the summer. Sonnenberg said she anticipates all of the redesign work completed by the end of the calendar year. In the meantime, a two-day design thinking institute is scheduled for July, giving educators a chance to learn the techniques that power STEAM Studio activities and how they might be able to implement them in their own classrooms.
Tim Linn is a public relations specialist for Rockhurst University.
Featured Business

2018 Startups to Watch
stats here
Related Posts on Startland News
BacklotCars co-founder set to be honored as UMKC’s regional Entrepreneur of the Year
A founder who helped drive one of the metro’s biggest startup exits is expected to be heralded in October as UMKC’s Kansas City Entrepreneur of the Year. Justin Davis, co-founder and CEO of BacklotCars, will take the stage Oct. 12 alongside five other honorees — business leaders who have shaped entrepreneurship, according to officials at…
Troost coffee shop ‘broken into pieces’ by collision; caffeinated supporters jump to action
A community of customers and neighbors is rallying behind Anchor Island Coffee this week after a pickup truck barreled into the front entrance of the tropical-themed breakfast spot at 41st and Troost. Fortunately no one was injured in the after-hours incident, said co-owner Armando Vasquez, who noted he was the last person to leave the…
KC innovator’s anti-itch spray so natural it was discovered on a front porch lab
Homindy founder Ronan Molloy discovered the benefits of his company’s itch relief spray somewhat by accident. During the summer of 2020, Molloy volunteered to participate in a clinical study for a tea with all-natural ingredients that was supposed to reduce inflammation in his right knee. At that time, he was president of the Innovation Stockyard,…
KC capital implants cattle tech startup with fuel to scale, expanding IVF labs, headcount
Livestock production has seen a remarkable transformation since Kerryann Kocher was growing up on her family’s sixth-generation farm in northeast Iowa, the Vytelle CEO said. Instead of just selecting the cow that looks best and bringing in the neighbor’s bull for breeding, as she remembers it, Kocher and Vytelle — a Kansas City-based precision livestock…
