A home for innovation

A home for innovation

The Innovation and Wellness Centre will provide innovators and entrepreneurs on campus with something they have been lacking. 

By Phil Gaudreau

January 15, 2018

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When helping student entrepreneurs get their start, one common piece of advice is to start small and lean. Once you have proven the model for your new business, then you can take on liabilities like leasing your own office space. 

Innovation leaders at Queen鈥檚 have practiced what they preached, and are now getting ready to reap the rewards when the Innovation and Wellness Centre (IWC) opens its doors next fall. 

The Innovation Hub will feature an event space for programming and student-led conferences.
The Innovation Hub will feature an event space for programming and student-led conferences. (Rendering)

鈥淭he IWC will bring our innovation resources on campus out of the bootstrapping phase,鈥 says Benoit-Antoine Bacon, Provost and Vice-Principal (Academic). 鈥淭he facility will provide a focal point for innovation and entrepreneurship activities at Queen鈥檚, and forge important cross-campus connections across our programs.鈥 

Located within the IWC, the Innovation Hub will unite some existing resources and programs and add a few new ones. It will include an event space, touch down tables for easy collaboration, and a maker space 鈥 a well-equipped work space where student entrepreneurs can create, experiment, and refine their ideas. Students helped shape the final design of the Hub. 

鈥淲e work with 2,000 students a year, and I expect that number will double in the next couple of years,鈥 says Greg Bavington (Sc鈥85), Executive Director, Dunin-Deshpande Queen鈥檚 Innovation Centre (DDQIC). 鈥淭he Innovation Hub will play a key role in supporting existing demand and future growth for innovation on campus.鈥 

Once it opens, the DDQIC is planning to expand its programming, with a focus on social enterprise 鈥 creating more organizations with a mission to both make money and do social good.  

Most importantly, the IWC will give the DDQIC the one thing they have been lacking: common space. 

鈥淲e toured other schools when making decisions on what needed to be in our Innovation Hub, and we found that Queen鈥檚 did a pretty good job at supporting innovation on campus,鈥 says Mr. Bavington. 鈥淭he final box we had to tick was to gather it all under one roof, allowing students to scale their business in a straightforward way without leaving campus.鈥 

The belief is that having everything located side-by-side will not only boost collaboration, it will also increase the visibility of innovation resources and programs. For example, students led 13 conferences and events linked to innovation this year and it was a challenge for each group to find space.  

鈥淟ocating the Innovation Hub within a multi-function building like the IWC is a strategic choice 鈥 one which is meant to show that everyone is welcome,鈥 he says. 鈥淚t can take many different people and different skillsets to make a successful business. We鈥檙e hoping to bend and weld the academic disciplines to get the sparks flying.鈥 

The Innovation Hub will not merely connect students to resources on campus 鈥 it is expected to build the links between the campus, Innovation Park, and the community. While the Hub will focus on current students, Innovation Park offers a 鈥渓ong runway鈥 as students graduate and look to grow their businesses. Likewise, the Hub will complement what Innovation Park does in supporting community entrepreneurs in southeastern Ontario. 

The creation of the IWC was made possible through $55 million in philanthropic support, including $40 million to revitalize the facility. In addition, the federal and Ontario governments contributed a combined total of nearly $22 million to this facility. 

To learn more about the Innovation and Wellness Centre, visit .