What is this connected to?

The maker-space is stronger when it links to the existing public ecosystem: people, training, media, noticeboards, disaster kiosks, shared meals, gardens, materials, resilience, grants and sister Strange But True pages.

A detailed digital community noticeboard concept with many local information cards and public update panels.

Most readers are not developers. These cards open the readable public pages. The source repo is included as a secondary trail for builders and reviewers.

How could the loop work?

A community notice or Markdown form could become a workshop night. The workshop night could produce a repair, a shared-tool record, a food-growing support part, a concrete sample, a photo, a short learning card and a grant note. Ready S.E.T. could turn that into training evidence. Hyperlocal media, noticeboards and disaster kiosks could turn it into public signal.

What if each linked page answered one part of the same public question: how does local capability become visible enough to support?

1

Notice. A need appears: repair, waste stream, event gear, tool request, concrete question or learning session.

2

Make. The maker-space hosts the safe practical work.

3

Publish. Hyperlocal media, noticeboards and kiosk screens make the work findable.

4

Feed and fund. Shared Table sees what can be grown, cooked or rescued, while Grants Lab and sponsors see evidence, not just aspiration.