Technology

On Reflection: The Lambo Leap

By Bill Virgin February 26, 2015

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This article originally appeared in the March 2015 issue of Seattle Magazine.

The University of Washington made considerable marketing hay from having the Automobili Lamborghini Advanced Composite Structures Laboratory (ACSL) on its campus, and why not? Aside from the association with the maker of some of the fastest and coolest cars on the planet, having the lab on campus put the UW squarely in the middle of one of the hottest fields in tech today: advanced materials.

But the marketing flurry is gone because so is the lab. Last year, the Lambo Lab moved to its own facility in Seattles Interbay neighborhood. Blame the split on the advanced materials world equivalent of artistic differences. As a part of the universitys College of Engineering, says Paolo Feraboli, the labs founder and director, We really didnt fit anymore. Were very applied; we design stuff. … They tend to be very focused on theoretical and non-industry-focused activities, while we are very industry focused.

The labs operations havent changed greatly since its separation from the university. Feraboli still has to bring in clients aside from Lamborghini to sponsor research and development work, but he adds, The reality is when youre a professor at a Tier 1 university, you have to bring in business.

And the ACSL is doing just that. Aerospace clients include Boeing, Gulfstream and Chinas Comac. It also has a Nagoya, Japan, facility, which has done work for Callaway Golf, a Canadian mountain-bike company and a European maker of snowboard bindings.

The lab is pushing ahead with a technology it calls forged composites. It replaces the labor-intensive process of building components by manually placing sheets of carbon-fiber composite fabric in molds with a technique using high pressure and a paste-like mixture combining fiber and resin. It enables the manufacturer to make complex shapes in a cost-effective way very quickly, Feraboli explains.

As a faculty member at the UW, Feraboli taught classes that had to adhere to the university schedule. Now, with its own academy as part of the lab, Feraboli can structure classes that accommodate the schedules of professionals in the composites world. The classes combine classroom and lab work and can last as little as one day and have as few as four students.

The ACSLs mission isnt simply to design what will be the next-generation sports car, aircraft component or piece of sports equipment, or to train others how to make them. Feraboli wants to make sure everybody in Seattle knows about the lab. And he wants to make it one of the pinnacles of composites activity in the United States.

I want to bring attention to the fact that the stuff we do for these companies is made in the U.S., not abroad, that stuff can be done in the U.S., Feraboli asserts. What Id like to do is be a poster child for that.

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