From $5K and Ikea Desks to a Statewide Startup Movement: Amanda Lewan on Building Bamboo cover art

From $5K and Ikea Desks to a Statewide Startup Movement: Amanda Lewan on Building Bamboo

From $5K and Ikea Desks to a Statewide Startup Movement: Amanda Lewan on Building Bamboo

Listen for free

View show details

About this listen

Can you really launch a startup hub with $5,000, no space, and a dream? Amanda Lewan did—and it didn’t stop there.

In this energizing episode of the Midwest House Podcast, host Ted Velie sits down with Amanda Lewan, co-founder and CEO of Bamboo, to explore how a scrappy coworking experiment in Detroit became one of Michigan’s most impactful startup communities. From Detroit's post-bankruptcy days to launching a 40,000-square-foot flagship in Grand Rapids, Amanda shares the behind-the-scenes story of how Bamboo has evolved into a statewide platform for founders, innovators, and underestimated entrepreneurs.

Inside this episode:

  • How Amanda helped Detroit’s startup scene take shape from scratch
  • What building real community looks like when there’s no playbook (or budget)
  • Why Bamboo’s new Grand Rapids space is more than a building—it’s a signal
  • The power of density, open access, and designing spaces where everyone belongs
  • What’s next for Michigan's east-meets-west startup ecosystem—and why now is the moment

Bonus: lessons from Detroit Startup Week, what Amanda learned from Brad Feld’s Startup Communities, and a sneak peek at her favorite up-and-coming Midwest startup.

🎯 This one’s for the builders, the connectors, and anyone who believes the Midwest is just getting started.

What listeners say about From $5K and Ikea Desks to a Statewide Startup Movement: Amanda Lewan on Building Bamboo

Average Customer Ratings

Reviews - Please select the tabs below to change the source of reviews.

In the spirit of reconciliation, Audible acknowledges the Traditional Custodians of country throughout Australia and their connections to land, sea and community. We pay our respect to their elders past and present and extend that respect to all Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander peoples today.