Published: Feb. 10, 2014

A group of 精品SM在线影片 students and alumni have put their entrepreneurial might into creating the area鈥檚 first co-working space designed to connect students with the business community.

鈥淲e鈥檙e building a bridge between CU-Boulder and the amazing startup ecosystem that鈥檚 all over Colorado,鈥 said Fletcher Richman, managing director of听听and a senior in electrical and computer engineering. 鈥淲e鈥檙e giving businesses a way to tap into the talent that鈥檚 on campus while also bringing more visibility and introducing students to the businesses that want to talk with them.鈥

Offering desks, Wi-Fi, printers, conference rooms with phone and video capabilities, mailboxes and more, Spark Boulder, located at 1310 College Ave. on University Hill, will open its doors to the public on Friday, Feb. 21. Monthly memberships are available at a discounted rate for students -- as low as $20 for early subscribers -- and for the community as well.

Members will be able to use the space to develop their innovative ideas. They鈥檒l also have the option of being connected to mentors through speed-networking events each Friday -- a unique element offered by Spark Boulder, coordinated in part with CU-Boulder鈥檚听听and the cross-campus New Venture Challenge.

鈥淢ost students have really great ideas and have awesome skill sets that allow them to create things that no one鈥檚 ever created before,鈥 said Richman. 鈥淥nce that鈥檚 happened, there are a lot of ways to increase a student鈥檚 chances of success. Mentorship has proven to be extremely valuable.鈥

Richman is launching the 5,400-square-foot Spark Boulder with Bill Shrum, a senior in environmental design, and Ben Buie, a spring 2013 graduate of CU-Boulder鈥檚 MBA program.

The trio has worked to form the organization as a nonprofit and secure the lease on University Hill. They鈥檝e raised about $140,000 in donations from a number of corporate partners. They鈥檝e also reached out across campus to build interest among entrepreneurial clubs and programs and gain faculty support.

Assistance has come to them as well from students excited about Spark Boulder. Stephanie Bigelow, a CU-Boulder undergraduate in architecture, designed the space. Hired contractors have constructed most of the space, but droves of students have volunteered their time to paint, stain wood and finish floors.

鈥淐ampuses in general can be fragmented places and that鈥檚 not really ideal for starting great businesses or coming up with really innovative ideas,鈥 said Richman. 鈥淲e want to bring together students from engineering, arts and sciences, law, business and other departments, and put them in one space and allow them to interact with people who think differently than they do.鈥

Early student members of Spark Boulder are working on concepts including a Web platform that connects people with expert professionals instantly through video chat, an aquaponics -- or food production -- system, a student-run design agency, and the development of iPhone apps.

鈥淚 think every student right now should be developing an entrepreneurial skill set,鈥 said Richman. 鈥淲hether you鈥檙e working at a big or a small company, the world is moving so quickly that if you don鈥檛 have some sense of how to innovate and how to be creative, you鈥檙e not going to be useful to most companies.鈥澨

Spark Boulder鈥檚 corporate partners include Archer Bay law firm, ArcStone Partners financial services, Pivotal Labs software development, Zayo Group bandwidth infrastructure services, Tap Influence marketing software and SendGrid email services.

For more information about Spark Boulder visit听.