The Garage at Northwestern
The Garage at Northwestern is a company.
Financial History
Leadership Team
Key people at The Garage at Northwestern.
The Garage at Northwestern is a company.
Key people at The Garage at Northwestern.
Key people at The Garage at Northwestern.
The Garage at Northwestern is not a company but Northwestern University's premier interdisciplinary hub for student entrepreneurship and innovation, spanning an 11,000–12,000 square foot space in the North Campus parking garage.[1][2][4] It fosters a vibrant community where students from all disciplines collaborate to launch startups, accessing workspaces, prototyping labs (including 3D printers, laser cutters, electronics benches, and VR/AR tools), mentorship from over 500 experts, and programs like Tinker, Residency, Jumpstart, and X-Factor.[1][2][5][6] Over the past decade since 2015, it has supported more than 1,500 student-founded ventures across medicine, law, energy, media, and technology, which have collectively raised over $1.5 billion, while engaging 3,000+ students annually through events and resources.[1][5][7]
Led by Executive Director Melissa Kaufman, The Garage emphasizes building knowledge, grit, networks, and a culture of experimentation, dispelling the "lone genius" myth by connecting students to peers, alumni, and faculty.[1][3][5] It serves as a second home for entrepreneurs, offering 24/7 access for residents, office hours with founders-in-residence, and training, with 1,000+ monthly visitors and homes to 50–90 active startups at any time.[1][3][6][8]
The Garage launched in 2015 as Northwestern's modest student startup hub, starting with a small group in its flagship Residency program within a repurposed parking garage space designed by Gensler to evoke startup dynamism while preserving parking stripes for cultural nod.[4][5] It quickly grew into a full-fledged incubator, carving out 11,000 square feet with collaborative zones, a mini kitchen, snacks, and maker facilities to support early prototyping—primarily for startups, not general academic projects.[1][2][6]
Pivotal moments include rapid expansion to host over 1,000 startups by 2023, the addition of diverse programs like Tinker for idea exploration and Office Hours for peer/expert advice, and recent scaling with a San Francisco outpost for Bay Area students/alumni plus a Chicago site in development to link startups with investors.[5][6] Testimonials from alumni like Lauren Huttner (Medill '24), Niraj Shah (McCormick '23), and Alexis Chan (McCormick '24) highlight its role in providing workspaces, collaborations, and pivotal programming that turned ideas into viable companies.[1][7]
The Garage rides the wave of university-driven entrepreneurship, capitalizing on rising demand for interdisciplinary innovation amid tech's shift toward AI, healthtech, energy, and media—fields its startups target.[5] Its timing aligns with post-2015 venture surges, enabling Northwestern students to tap Chicago's growing ecosystem while bridging to Silicon Valley via the new SF expansion, countering coastal dominance for Midwest talent.[5]
Market forces like alumni investor networks and $1.5B in startup funding amplify its influence, integrating academia with pros via anchor tenants and events that attract 1,000+ visitors monthly.[1][4][5] It shapes the ecosystem by producing battle-tested founders (e.g., Pathize Health CEO), normalizing risk-taking, and expanding geographically to connect student ventures with capital, boosting regional tech density.[5][7]
With Chicago and San Francisco expansions underway, The Garage is poised to supercharge its reach, potentially doubling engagement beyond 3,000 students yearly by linking more alumni-backed startups to global VCs amid AI-health-energy booms.[5] Trends like remote collaboration tools and alumni networks will fuel hybrid growth, evolving its influence from campus incubator to national pipeline for diverse founders.
This positions The Garage as Northwestern's entrepreneurial engine—transforming parking garage grit into billion-dollar impact, proving student ideas thrive with the right community spark.[1][5]