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The last time science changed everything, it was funded by patronage.
The Renaissance wasn’t funded by venture capital. It wasn’t funded by grant committees. It was funded by people who saw the work, understood it mattered, and chose to sustain it. Not because they’d get a return. Because the work changed the world.
This is the same model. Independent research, physics-first molecular design, built in the open, sustained by people who believe the future is buildable. No VC board deciding what gets studied. No grant committee gatekeeping which questions are worth asking. Just the physics, the engine, and the people who show up.
You’re not donating to charity. You’re funding a foundry.
Every contribution goes directly to the work. Compute time for MABE. Materials for experimental validation. Conference travel to present the science. University partnerships that put students on real problems. There’s no marketing department, no investor relations team, no overhead that isn’t science.
Joyful science is load-bearing infrastructure. The communication isn’t outreach — it’s the funding mechanism.
You believe the work matters. That’s enough.
Closer to the work.
Shape what gets built.
You have a question. We design the answer together. You become a scientist.
The point of MAAD is that physics-first design makes iterations cheap. You don’t need $100,000 and a contract research organisation. You need a question, and an engine that can explore the energy landscape. The rest is conversation.
If you have a problem that needs physics-first molecular design.
Industry partnerships are separate from patronage. Confidential research period, exclusive evaluation window, clear IP pathway. The platform stays independent. Your solution stays yours.
Partnership details at maadscientisttech.com →Ready to start? Have a question? Just want to say hello?
Whether you want to join the foundry, bring a problem to solve, explore a university collaboration, or talk about an industry partnership — one email is all it takes.
drhannah@maadscientisttech.com
Dr. Hannah Sanford-Crane
The physics speaks for itself.
Go back to the physics. See what the engine does. Then decide.