Professional Documents
Culture Documents
Highlights
1,000 attendees in Faneuil Hall for Fenway Forum, 300 in overflow space
Women in Medicine series kicked off with Where the Brain & Law Intersect
MONDAY, OCTOBER 5
3,700 attendees
10 events
A day of problem-solving
Problem-solving emerges as a
theme on HUBweeks third day
-The Boston Globe
Highlights
Started strong with a full house for the Opioid session at MGH
Tremendously successful kickoff to Solve: Not everything that is announced works but
not everything that is announced fails.
Congresswoman Katherine Clark offered opening remarks at the MA STEM event
Sun came out in Copley Square just in time for the New Balance Pilates in the Park
1600+ people filled six floors of at WeWork near South Station for the Celebrate
Boston party. Impressive crowd: diverse, talented and excited to be there.
TUESDAY, OCTOBER 6
2,500 attendees
12 events
Meaningful connections forged
WEDNESDAY, OCTOBER 7
3,000 attendees
12 events
HUBweek officially proclaimed by Governor
Highlights
Governor Baker keynoted the Beyond Technology event at MGH. He issued a proclamation to make
HUBweek official.
President Faust headlined the U.S. Conference of Mayors Town Hall meeting at Roxbury Community
College.Her remarks focused on the role of education in economic growth, as well as the role of colleges
and universities. About 200+ attendees in the crowd, including a large number of students.
The GlobeDocs Film Festival opened with a sold-out screening of Most Likely To Succeed in Coolidge
Corner, followed up a panel discussion featuring MA Secretary of Education Jim Peyser
Harvard University's Center for the Environment filled Sanders Theatre for a discussion of how ready (or
not) the region is for the impacts of Climate Change.
The morning started with a standing-room-only full house for Still Alzheimers at MGH, with a diverse
audience of clinicians, patients, affected family members and researchers taking part in a powerful event.
THURSDAY, OCTOBER 8
5,200 attendees
36 events
A look Inside Kendall Square
Highlights
The Digital Health Fair, organized by MGHs Healthcare Transformation Lab, saw several
hundred people pass through over two hours. It had good energy from start to finish.
The Women in Tech Story Jam was powerful and one of the highlights of the week. 6 tech
leaders telling personal stories and engaging an audience of more than 200 who hung around
for 45 minutes after the event.
The Bee exhibit and Bank of America photo booth drew in a lot of passerbys and was a great
front door to the day.
The closeout at CafeArtScience was the perfect finish, with a killer band and balloon jellyfish
Sony CEO Michael Lynton spoke candidly at Harvard about the Sony hack and lessons learned
from the front lines of the digital privacy wars
FRIDAY, OCTOBER 9
3,200 attendees
18 events
Crowned winners of two start-up competitions
Highlights
Our Convention at the Edward M. Kennedy Institute drew more than 300 talented young professionals for
more than 6 hours of workshops, all to build a common agenda for civic problem solving.
WorkBeat drew a couple of hundred people over the course of the afternoon for General Assembly classes,
architectural roundtables and free burritos. This pop-up community achieved a HUBweek goal of unexpected
experiences in familiar places and drew a lot of first-time HUBweek attendees into the fold.
The Beantown Throwdown filled the hall for the final judging. The winners came from Babson, second place
went to a team from Wentworth and third place went to students from Northeastern.
Agora, a MassChallenge company who was a part of both the US Mayors Town Hall and todays Our
Convention took home the prize at the #Tech4Democracy Showcase & Challenge.
Fox25 ran a piece on the sports concussion session, which had 175 people there and few empty seats. Very
lively and people stayed till after 5:30. Fox25 host Mark Ockerbloom led the discussion and was great.
SATURDAY, OCTOBER 10
22,000 attendees
7 events
Drones and an artistic takeover of the Hub
Highlights
Making Robotics Fly: Free and open to the public, the first part featured demonstrations of different
robotics tech, from different schools/companies and was oversubscribed 3x. After the demo, a symposium
that featured industry experts, regulators, manufacturers, investors, software engineers, the companies
using them, etc. A masterful session led by Mitch Weiss that unified the industry, addressed upcoming
challenges, and shaped the thinking around what the future will be.
Over 300 attendees made it to Dorchester for Innovating the Commonwealths Food Economy, where they
learned about local food startups, pickled their own food and enjoyed a community BBQ
Converse held their all-day JamAthon/HackAthon at their HQ
Fastball / Closing of the Film Festival / VIP reception: The movie was a hit, it was a beautiful night in Fenway
ILLUMINUS. The Pru featuredARTHUB, which trended throughout the night. Tally from the counters was
over 20,000, with people wandering through over the course of 6 hours.It was very clean, very family
friendly, with lots of young people early in the night. The crowd shifted as the night progressed, and the
concert at the HoB got out. Intelligent and inspiring work on display, showcasing art and technology.