Adelaide is now home to one of the few Future Factories in the Southern Hemisphere with the opening of the state-of-the-art Tonsley Manufacturing Innovation (TMI) Hub earlier this year.
The centrepiece of the new TMI Hub is the modular Future Factory.
Made in Germany by technology giant Festo, it showcases the latest automation, sensor, monitoring, robotic and cobotic technologies and provides the opportunity for world-class education and training in advanced manufacturing within a research environment.
This includes the Bionic Handling Assistant – a cobotic gripper arm modelled on the structure and function of an elephant’s trunk.
Located in the award-winning Tonsley Innovation District, the Hub is being driven by Flinders University, the South Australian Government and the Innovative Manufacturing Cooperative Research Centre (IMCRC).
The TMI Hub will provide practical training and real-world research opportunities for students, researchers and businesses wanting to learn more about automation, advanced robotics and the Internet of Things.
It will tap into the work of mature global companies, local enterprises and start-ups already located at Tonsley including Siemens, Zeiss Vision, ZEN Energy and SAGE Automation, as well as extending its training reach into the State’s fast-growing defence industry and the advanced manufacturing sector nationally.
Industry 4.0
The Director of the Australian Industrial Transformational Institute, Professor John Spoehr, says the TMI will play a catalytic role in promoting the understanding and application of the Industry 4.0 (i4.0) agenda, including robotics and automation in highly networked and flexible cloud-based production systems.
“The TMI will showcase the latest generation of Future Factory technologies which are revolutionising the way we design and make things,” says Professor Spoehr.
“It’s a prime example of how traditional manufacturing is making way for advanced manufacturing in the new economy,” he said.
“TMI will play a key role in accelerating the growth of advanced manufacturing by skilling our future workforce, with the adoption of digital technologies in South Australia giving rise to a new generation of manufacturers and highly skilled jobs.
“It will also help organisations to build their i4.0 capabilities through accredited and non-accredited education and training programs.
“Companies that engage with the TMI will greatly improve their chances of successful participation in defence supply chains to tap into the $90 billion worth of shipbuilding projects taking place in South Australia.
“Flinders welcomes the opportunity to partner with the State Government and the Innovative Manufacturing CRC to establish a truly world-class facility at Flinders University at Tonsley.
Innovative Manufacturing Accelerator Program
The TMI provides industry and researchers with the technologies to design, visualise and test production processes in a virtual environment to greatly mitigate risk prior to physical production.
The TMI goes hand in hand with Flinders University’s new Innovative Manufacturing Accelerator Program which from 2018 will support manufacturing-based companies to fast-forward product development and commercialisation processes.
The Manufacturing and Innovation Minister Kyam Maher says a State Government $490,000 grant for the TMI Hub adds to a $2 million SA investment in the IMCRC.
“As the economy transitions, we need to ensure our advanced manufacturing workforce and companies have the ability to compete globally in niche markets based on value and service,” says Mr Maher.
“Industry 4.0 is the next technological wave that will create opportunities for South Australia’s advanced manufacturers to diversify into growth sectors such as defence, food and health,” he says.
Igniting innovation and manufacturing growth
IMCRC CEO and Managing Director, David Chuter, says that the opportunity to catalyse investment in South Australian manufacturing is exciting.
“The IMCRC embraced the opportunity to work strategically with the South Australian Government and Flinders University, investing collaboratively to identify projects with the potential to ignite innovation and catalyse manufacturing growth,” Mr Chuter says.
“The South Australian Government should be applauded for its foresight to invest in the Future Factory as part of their financial contribution to IMCRC, making the innovation process tangible and accessible for manufacturers,” he says.
“This can now facilitate effective collaboration between the research community and industry through the utilisation of these technologically advanced facilities.”
Festo Didactic Head of Asia-Pacific, Volker Schmid says: “We’re extremely delighted to join hands with Flinders University to jointly compose further frameworks of cooperation in all aspects of training, research, curricula development and human resource development in the context of Industry 4.0.”
Building stronger links between education and industry
One of the leading companies with a presence at the TMI Hub and investing in Industry 4.0 is SAGE Automation.
Adrian Fahey, Chief Executive Officer of SAGE Group, says digital technology and industry 4.0 is very much front of mind and advancing at an incredible rate.
“The Tonsley Manufacturing Innovation Hub is a great opportunity to build even stronger links between education and industry,” Mr Fahey says.
“Being a part of this Hub gives is an opportunity to continue to focus on what we’re doing in industry 4.0, but also to tap into some of the new thinking from the institutes and the University and collaborate to deliver the very best thinking for our clients.”
Kyam Maher, Minister for Manufacturing and Innovation, opened the TMI Hub at Tonsley on February 9, with more than 300 representatives of industry and government in attendance.
For more information on the TMI Hub visit http://www.tmihub.com.au