Tumo Center for Creative Technologies
Թումո Ստեղծարար Տեխնոլոգիաների Կենտրոն | |
| Type | Private institution |
|---|---|
| Established | 2011 |
| Founders | Sam Simonian Sylva Simonian |
| Director | Marie Lou Papazian |
| Location | , 40°11′47.5″N 44°28′48.4″E / 40.196528°N 44.480111°E |
| Affiliations | Simonian Educational Foundation |
| Website | www |
The TUMO Center for Creative Technologies (Armenian: Թումո ստեղծարար տեխնոլոգիաների կենտրոն) is a nonprofit, tuition-free after-school education center for teenagers aged 12–18, focused on skills at the intersection of technology and design.
Founded in 2011 in Yerevan, Armenia,[1] TUMO combines self-directed learning, workshops, and project-based learning labs, without entrance exams or fees.
Since its founding, TUMO has expanded from Armenia into a global network of centers and satellite learning hubs operating across Europe,[2][3][4][5][6] the Middle East,[7] Asia,[8][9][10] and the Americas[11][12][13][14]. As of the mid-2020s, the organization reports 32,000+ active students[15] and an international alumni community. In addition to its core teen program, TUMO operates other initiatives, including TUMO Studios,[16] TUMO Labs,[17], 42 Yerevan,[18] the EU TUMO Convergence Center for Engineering and Applied Science[19][20], the Gyumri Market & Culinary School,[21][22], and the Armenian Cultural Heritage Institute.[23]
There are currently six TUMO centers in Armenia, located in Yerevan, Dilijan, Gyumri, Koghb, Kapan, and Yeghegnadzor. Until 2023, there used to be one TUMO center in Artsakh in Stepanakert with six TUMO boxes operating in neighboring towns, which are currently non-operational due to the expulsion of Nagorno-Karabakh Armenians. In 2021, TUMO announced the 60 million dollar TUMO Armenia campaign to bring 16 TUMO Hubs and 110 TUMO Boxes to Armenia.[24][25]
On February 19, 2018, at the World Congress on Information Technology conference in Hyderabad, India, TUMO received the "Implementation of the Digital Century" award.
In 2019, TUMO announced the TUMO Box, a mobile, technically equipped mini-center, made of a repurposed shipping container. Boxes can be installed in any city or village and serve as self-study areas for local youth. The first two TUMO Boxes were opened in Gavar and Berd.[26][27][28] More than 30 TUMO Boxes exist in Armenia as of December 2025.[29]
TUMO received the 2019 Europe Nostra Award in Education, Training and Outreach. The award is routinely given to organizations and individuals who make significant contributions in the areas of conservation, research and dedicated service.[30]
In 2025, TUMO received the WISE Prize for Education by the Qatar Foundation at a ceremony in Doha, Qatar.[31][32]
Background
The TUMO Center for Creative Technologies was founded in Yerevan, Armenia in 2011, with the first center opening on August 14. Serj Tankian of System of a Down performed a solo concert at the center's opening ceremony.[33]
TUMO is a non-profit venture founded by Sam and Sylva Simonian, with funding fully provided through the pair's Simonian Educational Foundation. Sam Simonian is an Armenian-American engineer who reached great success in the 1990s with INET, a telecommunications company.
Leadership
TUMO is headed by Chief Executive Officer (CEO) Marie Lou Papazian and Chief Development Officer (CDO) Pegor Papazian. The two developed TUMO's educational program and led efforts to design and construct the center's first facility in Yerevan. The duo are married and have five children.[34]
Marie Lou Papazian
Prior to running TUMO, Marie Lou Papazian headed the Education for Development Foundation, which brought together students from Armenia and the Diaspora through online education programs.[35] Papazian holds a Master’s Degree in Computing in Education from Columbia University's Teachers College, another Master's Degree in Construction Management, and is a graduate of Harvard Business School’s General Management Program.[36]
Marie Lou Papazian has previously founded the Narod Network Project and the Three Pomegranates Network, nonprofit, internet-based education initiatives connecting Armenian schoolchildren worldwide.[34] She has also led the construction management of several renowned high rise buildings in New York,[37] including he Marriott Hotel near New York City’s World Trade Center.[34]
In 2018, Papazian received the Movses Khorenatsi Medal by the Armenian Government, "the nation’s highest cultural honor, granted for outstanding achievements in education, culture, and the arts."[38]
In 2019, Papazian was awarded the rank of Chevalier (Knight) of the Ordre des Palmes Académiques. This distinction, granted by the French Republic, recognizes outstanding contributions to education, culture, and the advancement of knowledge. Papazian was nominated for the honor by Gilles Pécout, Rector of the Academy of Paris and the Île-de-France region, who is also a recipient of the same order. She received the award by Paris Mayor Anne Hidalgo.[39][40]
Pegor Papazian
Pegor Papazian holds a Bachelor of Architecture from the American University of Beirut, a Master of Science in Computer Science from the Massachusetts Institute of Technology (MIT), where he worked on artificial intelligence and design automation at the MIT AI Lab, and an MBA from the University of Chicago Booth School of Business.[41]
Pegor Papazian has formerly served as the Chief Executive Officer of the National Competitiveness Foundation of Armenia (NCFA). In this role, he has overseen large-scale public–private initiatives aimed at improving Armenia’s economic competitiveness, with a focus on education, tourism, healthcare, and communications infrastructure.[34] Among the projects is the Tatev Revival Project, including the Wings of Tatev aerial tramway, which gained international recognition as the world’s longest reversible aerial tramway[42] and significantly improved access to the Tatev Monastery complex. Papazian has also founded Bazillion Beings, a platform for virtual agents.[41]
Prior to joining NCFA, Papazian worked as Head of Project Development for the United States Agency for International Development (USAID) in Armenia. He previously held senior leadership roles in the private sector, including Vice President of Strategy and Product Development at Prosum Technology Services in California and as a founding partner of Design Technologies Consulting in Barcelona, Spain.[34]
TUMO Foundation Board of Directors
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Advisory Board
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Educational model
Program
TUMO operates as a tuition-free, extracurricular education program for teenagers aged 12–18. Participation is open, with no entrance exams or academic prerequisites. The program is structured to complement formal schooling and is delivered primarily after school hours and on weekends. A unique aspect of TUMO's education model is the TUMO Path,[44][45] a software program developed in-house that places students on a learning plan based on the students' expressed areas of interest, showing the students' rate of progress and letting them know which tasks they need to complete to move on to the next level.
TUMO's curriculum consists of self-learning exercises, workshops and learning labs in 14 learning targets,[46] including:
- Animation
- Game Development
- Filmmaking
- Web Development
- Music
- Writing
- Drawing
- Graphic Design
- 3D Modeling
- Programming
- Robotics
- Motion Graphics
- Photography
- GenAI
Curriculum
TUMO’s learning system combines three interconnected components:
- Self-learning: Students work independently through interactive digital activities on the TUMO Path. These activities introduce core concepts and skills and allow students to progress at their own pace with support from on-site coaches.[45][47]
- Workshops: Instructor-led, hands-on courses offered at beginner to advanced levels. Workshops are project-based and culminate in individual or group outcomes that demonstrate applied skills.[48]
- Learning Labs: Time-bound, advanced programs led by local and international professionals. Labs focus on real-world challenges and extended projects and are typically offered to students who have completed prerequisite self-learning and workshops.[49]
Rather than diplomas or certification, students build digital portfolios consisting of completed projects, which may be used for further education or employment applications.
Pedagogical approach
TUMO’s educational approach emphasizes voluntary participation and learner autonomy. Often referred to by the organization as a “walk-away pedagogy,” the model allows students to discontinue or change learning paths without penalty. The approach is intended to foster intrinsic motivation and reduce barriers between artistic and technical domains by emphasizing learning through making.[50][51]
Centers
TUMO Armenia
TUMO Yerevan
TUMO's first center opened in Yerevan in 2011. The center's namesake is inspired by next-door Tumanyan Park, which bears the name of prominent Armenian author Hovhannes Tumanyan. TUMO Yerevan was designed by architect Bernard Khoury. Approximately 15,000 students actively attend the center.[1]
TUMO Dilijan
TUMO's second center in Dilijan opened in 2012 under a cooperative agreement between TUMO and the Armenian General Benevolent Union, with additional support from the Central Bank of Armenia.
TUMO Gyumri
TUMO Gyumri started operating in a temporary location since 2015, after which it soon moved to the Gyumri Historical Theater Building, which TUMO restored in order to accommodate 4,000 students. The idea of TUMO Gyumri sprang from Shant TV, which kickstarted a fundraising drive to open the center. TUMO Gyumri is one of three TUMO centers (along with TUMO Dilijan and TUMO Stepanakert) to benefit from a cooperative partnership with the Armenian General Benevolent Union.[52]
TUMO Gyumri was a nominee of the 2022 EUmies Awards.[53]
TUMO Stepanakert (2015 – 2023)
TUMO Stepanakert is one of three areas of cooperation between TUMO and AGBU, first opened in 2015.[54] It was located on the first floor of a historic building in the city, donated to TUMO on behalf of the Republic of Artsakh and renovated with the help of Karabakh Telecom. The center and its surrounding TUMO Boxes[55] are currently non-operational following the 2023 Azerbaijani offensive and the expulsion of Nagorno-Karabakh Armenians.
TUMO Koghb
A new TUMO center in Armenia's north-eastern border village of Koghb opened its doors officially in June 2024. The center accommodates over 1,000 teenagers from Koghb and neighboring towns of Noyemberyan, Berdavan and beyond. The building, designed by architect Bernard Khoury, is equipped with high-tech workshop rooms, self-learning stations, a sound recording studio, a cinema, and a large sports facility.
TUMO Kapan
TUMO Masis
The town of Masis, to the south of Yerevan, is the latest addition to the TUMO family. Thanks to a partnership with the Masis Development Foundation the center will accommodate up to 1,000 students, with room for expansion.[56]
TUMO International
TUMO Paris
The first TUMO International Center opened in Paris in October 2018. It is located in the center of Forum des Images in Les Halles.[57][58] Paris Mayor Anne Hidalgo initiated the process after visiting TUMO in Armenia.[58]
TUMO Beirut
TUMO Beirut is the second TUMO center operating outside of Armenia and the first in the Middle East. It is located in the Beirut Digital District. The center unofficially opened in 2018 and operated for a while. A brand-new TUMO will be launched in Beirut in 2026.[7]
TUMO Tirana
TUMO Tirana opened its doors in Tirana, October 2020. It was temporarily located in the Arena Business Center located in Albania's biggest stadium. After its reconstruction, in 2023, the center relocated to the Pyramid of Tirana. The Soviet-era landmark was revamped by MVRDV.[59] TUMO Tirana was opened in cooperation with the American-Albanian Development Foundation and the Municipality of Tirana. TUMO Tirana is the first TUMO center in the Balkans.[5][60][61]
TUMO Berlin
After a partnership agreement was signed between TUMO and KfW in Yerevan in January 2020, attended by Armenian Deputy Prime Minister Mher Grigoryan,[62] TUMO Berlin launched in Berlin in November 2020. The new TUMO Center occupies four floors in a new building, located in the historic Charlottenburg district. The official opening of TUMO Berlin took place in August 2021.[63]
It's worth noting that German Chancellor Angela Merkel had visited TUMO Yerevan in August, 2018,[64] and said "I’m shocked in a real positive way. This Tumo is not for Armenia only. It’s international. It’s a philosophy."[65] In June of 2021, Merkel paid a virtual visit to TUMO Berlin[66], and visited the Center in-person in November of the same year.[67][68]
TUMO Mannheim
The second German TUMO Center, TUMO Mannheim, was scheduled to open upon an agreement signed in Yerevan between TUMO, the KfW Group, and Starkmacher e.V. in December 2022.[69] In September of 2024, the center opened in Mannheim, in September 2024 in the historic Lindenhof district.[70][71][72][73][74]
TUMO Lyon
By December of 2021, it was announced that the second center in France would be launched in 2022, in Lyon.[75] TUMO Lyon (Auvergne-Rhône-Alpes) launched in January 2022 on the Campus Région du Numérique à Charbonnières.[76]
TUMO Kyiv
In March of 2020, TUMO announced plans to launch another center in Kyiv, Ukraine.[77] In May of 2020, Armenia’s Ambassador to Ukraine, Tigran Seiranian, visited the future premises of TUMO Kyiv, which would be located in the 19th-century Arsenal Factory.[78] TUMO Kyiv opened its doors September 2021, attended by the Ambassador of Armenia to Ukraine, Vladimir Karapetyan.[79]
TUMO Marseille
TUMO Marseille opening its doors in 2025 in Marseille, France, as part of the organization’s expansion in the country, joining existing centers such as TUMO Paris and TUMO Lyon. Located in the Hangar à Sucre in Marseille’s 2nd arrondissement.[80]
TUMO Coimbra
In January of 2023, TUMO announced its plans to open the first center in Portugal, in the city of Coimbra.[81]
TUMO Coimbra opened its doors in September 2023.[82] The building is located in the old post office, next to the city market and the town hall.
On 8 September 2025, the Coimbra City Council acknowledged, during an executive meeting, the implementation report and activity plan submitted by the Topsail Association, the managing entity of TUMO Coimbra. During the 2024–2025 academic year, the center hosted 1,218 students, with plans announced to expand capacity to 1,500 students for the 2025–2026 academic year. As part of the existing cooperation protocol, the mayor approved by decree the disbursement of the municipal contribution amounting to €250,000.[83]
TUMO Los Angeles
TUMO Los Angeles is the first U.S. branch of TUMO. Planning began in 2021, when California Assemblymember Adrin Nazarian secured state budget funding to establish the center in the San Fernando Valley. In June 2021, Nazarian announced that the 2021–22 state budget would include a $9 million USD appropriation to establish a TUMO Center in Los Angeles, in partnership with the City of Los Angeles.[84] The funding package also included $1 million for USC’s Armenian Studies Institute and $1 million for the Lark Musical Society.[85]
By early 2023 the center’s site had been acquired in North Hollywood, in the East San Fernando Valley. The chosen location was a vacant office building at 4146 Lankershim Boulevard in the NoHo Arts District of North Hollywood.[86]
Construction was completed by 2024. A ceremonial groundbreaking took place on February 12, 2024. The City of Los Angeles press office reported that Mayor Karen Bass, Council President Paul Krekorian and TUMO founder Sam Simonian were on hand as crews broke ground on “the first TUMO Technology Learning Center in the United States.”[87] Bass said the center would provide “much needed design and technology education to local youth through after-school and weekend programs completely free of charge”, and Krekorian said it would help develop “the next generation of creative leaders” for Los Angeles.
TUMO Los Angeles officially opened to the public in the autumn of 2025. An inauguration ceremony was held on October 18, 2025 at the center’s North Hollywood.[88] TUMO founder Sam Simonian said that what began as a dream in Yerevan had become “a global movement” and that he was “proud and grateful to announce that we are now here in Los Angeles, ready to change lives once again." [89]
Serj Tankian, a member of TUMO's Advisory Board, has stated that the Los Angeles center will be located in North Hollywood. He has emphasized "the fact that it's in L.A., we can get actors, we can get filmmakers. I think the creative side, especially the entertainment creative side of the TUMO L.A, is gonna have a VIP list. I'm gonna get hassled to hassle people basically, for the next couple of years.[90]
TUMO Amsterdam
In April of 2024, TUMO Amsterdam was announced as the first TUMO Center in the Netherlands and was scheduled to open in 2025 in Amsterdam.
Developed as a public–private partnership between the City of Amsterdam, the Public Library of Amsterdam (OBA), and private-sector partners including TomTom, Adyen, Just Eat Takeaway.com, and Miro, the center was designed to serve up to 1,000 students, with plans for additional TUMO boxes to expand capacity.
The project was officially inaugurated on April 16 during a meeting attended by TUMO Chief Development Officer Pegor Papazian, Amsterdam Deputy Mayor Alexander Scholtes, and partner representatives. Located in Amsterdam-Zuidoost (near the Kraaiennest metro station), the center was set to operate within the OBA Next innovation lab and later the Amsterdam Library of the Future. The launch marked TUMO’s tenth international center, further extending the network beyond Armenia.[91][92]
TUMO Amsterdam opened its doors in fall of 2025.
TUMO Buenos Aires
In 2024, the Buenos Aires city government announced plans to open the first TUMO Center in Latin America. The Center was to be located at the Centro Metropolitano de Diseño (CMD) in the Barracas district and was initially scheduled to open in mid-2025.[93] At that time, the city said it would eventually create three TUMO Centers in different districts (Barracas, Balvanera and Núñez) by 2026.[93][94] The government committed roughly AR$800 million (about US$3 million) for equipment in the first site.[94]
A signing ceremony was held in late 2024 at the CMD attended by Chief of Government of Buenos Aires Jorge Macri, Education Minister Mercedes Miguel, and TUMO founders Sam and Sylva Simonian (via video) and TUMO CDO Pegor Papazian.[95]
In May 2025, the first South American center opened in Argentina, TUMO Buenos Aires at the Barraca's Metropolitan Design Center (CMD), an intelligent building from a recycled 1934 Fish Market retaining the old Art Deco façade, an urban indicator, located in the Barracas neighborhood.[96]
TUMO Gunma
TUMO Gunma opened in the summer of 2025, at G Messe Gunma in Takasaki, Gunma Prefecture, Japan. The center was developed in partnership with the Government of Gunma Prefecture. The opening ceremony was attended by TUMO founders Sam and Sylva Simonian, the Governor of Gunma Prefecture, Ichita Yamamoto, former Japanese Digital Transformation Minister Taro Kono, representatives of the Armenian National Assembly, and the Armenian Ambassador to Japan.[97][98]
The center was projected to serve thousands of students from across the prefecture and acted as a springboard for future centers and TUMO Boxes planned in other Japanese cities such as Maebashi and Kusatsu.
During a visit in September 2025, Armenia’s Minister of Education, Science, Culture, and Sports highlighted the center’s role in extending TUMO’s learning model and its expected annual capacity of up to 9,400 students once fully operational.[99]
TUMO Gunma’s establishment coincided with Armenia’s participation at Expo 2025 Osaka, where TUMO’s educational initiatives were showcased.[100] The pavilion won Silver in the Connecting Lives category.[101]
TUMO Hirschaid
TUMO expanded its presence in Hirschaid, Germany, with the opening of TUMO Hirschaid on 31 January, 2025, adding to existing centers in Berlin and Mannheim.[102]
Located at the MINT-Zentrum Hirschaid and funded by Germany’s Federal Ministry of Education and Research and KfW, the center was designed by Austrian architect Thomas Herzig and was built to serve up to 500 students per week, with approximately 200 enrolled at launch.[102]
Further expansion was announced with additional centers planned in Lüdenscheid, Saarbrücken, and Essen, continuing TUMO’s rollout in Germany.[102]
TUMO Mumbai
In August 2025, TUMO announced the upcoming launch of TUMO Mumbai in Mumbai, India.[103] The launch is scheduled for 2026, in partnership with the Shantilal Shanghvi Foundation, will be housed in Shikha Academy’s brand-new building.[103]
TUMO Astana
Plans for TUMO Astana were formalized following an agreement between TUMO and Astana Hub, establishing the first TUMO Center in Central Asia.
The center was planned to operate from the alem.ai International Center for Artificial Intelligence in Astana, Kazakhstan, and to offer the signature program. The project formed part of Kazakhstan’s broader national strategy to expand digital skills training and was aligned with government initiatives aimed at training one million citizens in digital competencies.
The opening of TUMO Astana was publicly confirmed by President Kassym-Jomart Tokayev during a joint press briefing with Armenian Prime Minister Nikol Pashinyan, who highlighted cooperation between Kazakhstan and Armenia in artificial intelligence, advanced technologies, and digital solutions. Officials stated that the center would serve as a platform for knowledge exchange and youth development within Kazakhstan’s innovation ecosystem, with its launch scheduled for 2025–2026.[104][105]
TUMO Bilbao-Bizkaia
Currently under construction, in 2026, TUMO will open Bilbao-Bizkaia, the first TUMO Center in Spain, located in the iconic Azkuna Zentroa – Alhóndiga Bilbao, originally built as a wine warehouse in 1909, this historic building has become Bilbao’s cultural heart, reimagined by designer Philippe Starck into a dynamic space. The center will have a weekly capacity of 1,500 students, providing them with a unique educational experience in technology and design.[106]
TUMO Montevideo
The TUMO Uruguay center is being established thanks to the support of Corporación América Airports, Aeropuertos Uruguay and Ceibal.[107] Scheduled to commence operations in April 2026, it will be located within the Carrasco International Airport facilities.[108]
TUMO Box
The TUMO Box project was announced in 2019. TUMO Boxes function as satellite TUMO centers wirelessly connected to larger TUMO centers. This project will allow rural Armenian youth outside of close proximity to a TUMO branch to access TUMO's educational program. The TUMO Box is mobile and can easily be installed in any city or village, functioning as a self-learning center for local youth. Upon completing self-learning activities at their local TUMO Box, students will travel to the nearest TUMO branch for specialized workshops and project labs.
The project first opened its doors in Berd and in Gavar as part of a collaboration among TUMO, Amundi-ACBA, and the HAYG Foundation. Upon completing self-learning activities in the TUMO Box's, students can then travel to TUMO Dilijan for more hands-on, practical training. TUMO Boxes will initially provide education in technology and design to about 250 students a year.
On December 20, 2021, a TUMO Box was opened in Vayk alongside two other boxes in Kapan and Sevan on the same day. This box is supported by Dr. Armineh and Dr. Ara Tavitian.[109]
The box in Sevan was opened on December 20, 2021, with the support of an anonymous donor.[110]
The box in Kapan is supported by Lara Arslanian, Garabed Bardakjian and Sarine Semerjian. The box will remain in place for one year, after which it will be replaced by the full-featured TUMO Kapan center inside the city's historic train station, currently being renovated thanks to a generous donation by Judy Saryan and Victor Zarougian.[111]
The TUMO box in Martakert, the first in Artsakh, marked the launch of TUMO's Artsakh expansion program. TUMO Stepanakert has welcomed approximately 4000 students and held over 300 workshops, 100 learning labs, and countless special projects with the support of AGBU since 2015. Students from Martakert participate in the self-learning portion of the program at the box, and commute to TUMO Stepanakert for workshops and learning labs, using a specially organized transportation system.[112]
EU TUMO Convergence Center
The EU TUMO Convergence Center for Engineering and Applied Sciences launched in 2019. The center is currently being implemented as part of a partnership with the European Union. It will be located adjacent to TUMO Yerevan and will cover approximately 25,000 square meters. The center, which cost roughly 25 million euros, will function as a hub for education, research, and startup industries. The center aspires to create an open platform while building a vibrant community, bringing together students, young professionals, and both local and international companies. Additional wings of the facility will provide space for School 42, a well-known computer programming school geared towards young professionals initially established in France. The center is currently being designed by MVRDV, a Dutch architecture firm.
TUMO Studios
TUMO Studios is a nonprofit educational program for university students and young professionals.
TUMO Studios offers technical development and design training in ten distinct areas: jewelry, ceramics, embroidery, printing, fashion, accessories design, wood carving, stone masonry, production design, and cooking.
The studios are located on 38 Pushkin Street in an early 20th-century building that used to house industrialist Arakel Afrikyan. The studios have preserved the building's interior, with the interior's wall design and furniture dating back to turn of the century Yerevan.
The John and Hasmik Mgrdichian Foundation (JHM) has been a sponsor of TUMO Studios since its inception in 2017. It has worked closely with the TUMO Studios team to build a strong foundation in contemporary Armenian design.[113]
TUMO Labs
TUMO Labs represents the educational direction of the EU TUMO Convergence Center. This tuition-free applied science and engineering hub connects higher education with industry. Anyone over the age of 18 can participate in the program designed specifically for TUMO Labs.
The TUMO Labs education program is based on the just-in-time methodology so that the TUMO projects and guided self-learning content corresponds to the constantly evolving tech and science industries.
TUMO Labs also includes 42 Yerevan, the Armenian branch of the 42 network of programming schools. 42's curriculum is based on a self-learning platform where students complete practical projects and refine their skills.[114]
Camp TUMO
TUMO's annual summer camp has been taking place since 2012. The camp allows teenagers from all over the world to familiarize themselves with TUMO's curriculum while accelerating their knowledge and skill levels in several educational disciplines. Additionally, attendants participate in games and various events while gaining the opportunity to tour Armenia's many historical-cultural sites.
See also
References
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