Author: Clare Le

Long-Awaited Arts District Park Opens – Downtown News

DTLA—The Arts District is in the midst of an unprecedented residential burst. The 320-apartment Garey Building opened in July. At 950 E. Third St., a mega-development with 472 rental units is under construction. In September, plans were unveiled for a $2 billion development highlighted by a pair of 58-story towers. The list goes on and on.

LACI Announces Launch of Advanced Prototyping Center at La Kretz Innovation Campus

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Applications are now open to access the West Coast’s most advanced prototyping equipment and lab space available to the public.

 

Los Angeles, CA- November 2, 2016 – The Los Angeles Cleantech Incubator (LACI), a non-profit organization helping promising cleantech companies deliver market-ready solutions and further economic development for the City of Los Angeles, announces the launch of the Advanced Prototyping Center (APC) at the new La Kretz Innovation Campus in the DTLA Arts District. Significant discounts for memberships are being offered for the public to join a community of inventors, engineers, artists and entrepreneurs through the Advanced Prototyping Center’s What Will You Make Today? Indiegogo campaign.

The Advanced Prototyping Center, currently being used by LACI’s portfolio companies for product development, will open its doors to the public in January 2017. Applications are now being accepted for monthly memberships enabling innovators of all skill levels to bring their ideas to life. Use of the West Coast’s highest caliber facility for prototyping offers members the ability design, build, test, certify and manufacture products all under one roof. The facility includes an electronics lab, chemistry lab, cell lab, CNC center, waterjet center, welding shop, 3D printing shop, textile shop, material working center, use of premium CAD software, laser cutters, woodworking, measurement science equipment, assembly space, training centers and more.

“The diverse breadth and depth of capabilities within the Advanced Prototyping Center’s multiple labs and shops accommodate everyone from beginners wanting to learn about 3D printing to companies taking their product through prototyping and design to manufacturing,” states Brandon Iglesias, LACI Director of Engineering.

Tours of the Advanced Prototyping Center and product demos will be offered at the upcoming “Smart Prototyping: Turning Your Idea into a Real Product” MAKE IT IN LA event, taking place December 1, 2016 from 3:30-6:30 p.m. at the La Kretz Innovation Campus. The Advanced Prototyping Center is a coalition member of MAKE IT IN LA, Los Angeles Mayor Eric Garcetti’s region-wide initiative to connect and celebrate the nation’s largest community of makers, and will host the event on campus as part of the MAKE IT IN LA event series.

The La Kretz Innovation Campus is a place where entrepreneurs, engineers, scientists, and policymakers can collaborate, promote and support the development of clean technologies and LA’s green economy. The Campus, which is home to LACI and sits on 3.2-acres owned by the Los Angeles Department of Water & Power (LADWP), is LEED Platinum Certified and houses an ecosystem of thought leaders shaping a sustainable future for Los Angeles.

The Advanced Prototyping Center is managed by LACI and was made possible through funding from the City of Los Angeles, Los Angeles Department of Water & Power, U.S. Economic Development Administration and founding sponsorships from Autodesk, Eppendorf, Hyperloop Tech, EMD Millipore, Faro, SafetySpot.com, ProSIM, Dassault Systemes, ANSYS, Aproe, Reactwell, Trinity, Purple Platypus, Insight Systems Exchange, National Instruments and Advanced Industrial Solutions.

About LACI

The Los Angeles Cleantech Incubator (LACI) is a private non-profit organization helping to accelerate the commercialization of clean technologies by offering flexible office space, CEO coaching, mentoring, and access to a robust network of partnerships and capital. LACI was founded in 2011 as a cluster-driven economic development initiative supported by the City of Los Angeles, LADWP and the Community Redevelopment Agency of Los Angeles. Recognized as one of the most innovative business incubators in the world, LACI identifies local entrepreneurs across multiple cleantech business sectors and guides them to market, creating jobs that advance LA’s green economy. In just five years, LACI has helped 60 companies raise $80M in funding, created 1,150 jobs, and delivered more than $230M in long term economic value for the City of Los Angeles. LACI operates out of the La Kretz Innovation Campus with satellite offices in Northridge, CA and Silicon Valley and is the organizer of GloSho and founder of the Network for Global Innovation NGIN. For additional information, please visit: newlaci.staging.wpengine.com

Media Contact:

Laurie Peters

Communications Director

lpeters@alaincubator.org

(M) 818.635.4101

(O) 213.358.6542

525 S. Hewitt Street
Los Angeles, CA 90013
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AIA|LA Design Awards Go To Roberts Pavilion and LKIC

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Los Angeles, CA – October 25, 2016 – JFAK is proud to announce that it garnered two awards at the prestigious 2016 Design Awards program Monday night, October 24, 2016, hosted by the American Institute of Architects Los Angeles (AIA|LA).

Roberts Pavilion, a state-of-the art athletics, fitness and events center at Claremont McKenna College, earned an AIA|LA Design Award. “We’re proud to say that Roberts Pavilion has become a new interactive and social hub on campus, feeding not only the bodies but also the minds and hearts of the extended Claremont Colleges community,” said John Friedman, FAIA and Principal of JFAK Architects.

La Kretz Innovation Campus (LKIC), an adaptive reuse project in the Arts District of Downtown Los Angeles, was honored as part of AIA|LA’s first ever COTE LA awards – recognizing projects that further and/or demonstrate achievement in the implementation of sustainability features. LKIC not only uses sustainable solutions such as solatubes, greywater filtration system, solar microgrid, and more, but is a new kind of innovation center – one at which community, culture, and technological entrepreneurship join forces in search of sustainable solutions to myriad environmental and other challenges we face today.

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Principal John Friedman, FAIA, right, accompanied by Associates Derek Greene (left) and Shuang Xu, accepted the awards on behalf of the firm.

About the AIA|LA Design Awards: Completed projects, located anywhere, that are designed by AIA members from firms based in the LA area, and architecture constructed in Los Angeles by any AIA member, no matter their base of operations, are eligible for submission for Design and COTE LA Awards. Selected by a jury of distinguished architects based across the United States and conversant in the field’s potential at national and international levels, the AIA|LA Design Awards honor design excellence in some of the most significant completed projects in the country at this time. The caliber of work submitted and volume of submissions make the program amongst the most competitive AIA chapters host.

For more information, click through to the AIA|LA Press Release.

LA Cleantech Incubator To Build Global Innovation Network – Business Line

Partners with Centre for IIM-A, T-Hub

Fred H Walti II, President and Chief Executive Officer, Los Angeles Cleantech Incubator, is on a mission in India.

Having managed to groom scores of start-ups in the cleantech space, he is seeking to build a global network of innovation, helping entrepreneurs come on its platform.

So far, it has partnered with IIM-Ahmedabad’s Centre for Innovation, Incubation and Entrepreneurship, and T-Hub promoted by the Telangana government.

Walti believes it is just the beginning of what is possible through the network for global innovation.

“One can get to learn, train, innovate, be mentored, and later funded. There is no limit to what this collaboration could do,” he says.

Walti told BusinessLine: “As a non-profit organisation, we help young entrepreneurs in the cleantech space; we incubate them and take them through the learning curve, and help then raise funds and grow. Now we have four centres, three in Los Angeles and one in North California.”

Barely 12 per cent of the applicants get selected to be part of the incubation programme. After going through rigorously training, they get assigned to successful companies and their executives, who mentor them.

“We are working in Ethiopia with the World Bank in the cleantech space. India has immense scope in the area of renewable energy. Globally, the installed capacity of renewable energy is about 175 GW, and India alone is seeking to add 175 GW by 2022,” he says.

“We also hope to find investment funds and facilitate funding for these start-ups.”

(This article was published in the Business Line print edition dated October 26, 2016)

The Industry of Innovation – LA Dreams

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There is a palpable fervor in the air of Los Angeles that promises to change the way Angelenos conduct business and live our lives.  We’re not talking about the remaining days of our nation’s political stage, but the industry of innovation that is booming here in Los Angeles.

In September, the second annual Los Angeles Techday was held, and the activity on the convention floor was reminiscent of the intensity found at the New York Stock Exchange.

Historically, Los Angeles has lagged behind other markets like Silicon Valley and New York City in the area of innovation and new tech startups.  But with room to grow and LA’s importance as a global center, the City of Angels is poised to be the next big thing in the industry of innovation, and leading the way is the Los Angeles Cleantech Incubator (LACI).

In 2011, Mayor Antonio Villaraigosa announced that the City of Los Angeles would set out to be a leader in the green economy and developed LACI to play an important role in accelerating the commercialization of clean technologies from the area’s universities, as well as from independent inventors and entrepreneurs. Five years later, LACI officially opened their offices at the brand-new La Kretz Innovation Campus, on a 3.2-acre property owned by DWP.

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On October 7th, with much fanfare and excitement, the staff and management of the Los Angeles Cleantech Incubator (LACI) invited the public to the grand opening and official ribbon-cutting ceremony of their new La Kretz Innovation Campus in the heart of DTLA’s dynamic Arts District.  Even before they officially opened their doors to the public, the team working under the solar-paneled roof had already achieved key accomplishments within the industry of innovation.  For the second consecutive year, LACI was ranked in the top-10 of university-affiliated incubators, this time #3 in the world, by UBI Global. It was also the top-ranked cleantech incubator on that index.

So what exactly is the LA Cleantech Incubator?  Quite simply, it is a joint venture between government and industry that leverages technology and the resources of Los Angeles to develop private startup enterprises creating products and services that will advance the City’s initiative to be a leader in the green economy.

In doing so, several goals of the City are met, including over 1,150 green jobs created, cleaner air and water, improved water conservation, increased renewable energy usage (LA is #1 in the US with 20% usage), increased recycling efforts (LA has the highest rate of any major US city), and 60 LACI portfolio companies have attracted more than $78 million in invested capital, generating $230 million in long-term economic value.  All of this in just five years, working out of a much smaller, refurbished bus repair terminal.  No wonder the team was so excited on opening day of the La Kretz Innovation Campus.  If they can achieve all of this from a small garage in just five years, imagine what they can do in their new 60,000-sq.-ft., state-of-the-art facility.

“Innovation begets innovation and we now work in a world-class innovative space,” states Fred Walti, President & CEO of the Los Angeles Cleantech Incubator. Walti says the La Kretz Innovation Campus design is pushing the envelope with Leadership in Energy and Environmental Design (LEED) and sustainability. LACI has the country’s first public UV greywater solution and the energy created from its 175 kilowatt solar farm feeds into LA’s first public microgrid system, providing energy to the building and inspiring future microgrids for homes and businesses.

 

LACI / La Kretz Grand Opening, October 7, 2016

Mayor Eric Garcetti, Fred Walti, President & CEO of LACI & Former Mayor Antonio Villaraigosa at LACI / La Kretz Grand Opening, October 7, 2016

A growing segment in the industry of innovation are creative work spaces with support staff and classroom training, as well as ‘maker spaces’, or prototyping labs, for entrepreneurs and inventors to easily develop working models of their product concepts.  The La Kretz Innovation Campus answers this marketplace need and beyond.  The facility features office space and amenities for LACI’s burgeoning cleantech portfolio companies to utilize as they grow and develop their businesses. The Campus features collaborative workspace, an Advanced Prototyping Center (including a 3D printing and laser shop, water jet center, electronics, robotics lab, chemistry lab, assembly bay and a training center), a 125-person amphitheater and event space, in addition to LADWP laboratories for both Customer Engagement and Energy Efficiency Technology, and the Case Study Home showcasing energy and water saving products as well as rebates and services available to LADWP customers, among other features.  The innovation marketplace is so strong that LACI’s business model has inspired a similar non-profit venture to set-up shop in Old Town Pasadena in 2017 focusing primarily on automotive design.

LACI helps manage the La Kretz Innovation Campus, recruiting entrepreneurs, organizations and community thought leaders focused on the region’s clean energy sector to rent space and develop businesses within the building. The shared-space design allows emerging cleantech portfolio companies and LADWP engineers to work side-by-side with leaders in innovation and environmental sustainability, receiving guidance and mentorship as they develop new technologies that both grow Los Angeles’ economy and promote sustainability amongst Angelenos.

In partnership with the City’s exceptional academic and research organizations – UCLA, USC, Caltech and Jet Propulsion Laboratory – LACI helps accelerate the commercialization of their clean technologies in addition to accelerating new products developed by independent entrepreneurs. LACI is a result of the Clean Tech Los Angeles (CTLA) alliance among the Mayor’s office, the City’s universities, the Los Angeles County Economic Development Corporation, the Los Angeles Business Council, the Los Angeles Area Chamber of Commerce, LADWP and the CRA/LA.

Prototyping Solutions All In One Place

Purple Platypus, the Southwest platinum reseller to Stratasys, the largest 3D printing solutions company, has partnered with LACI.  As the exclusive 3D printing sponsor of the new additive manufacturing center inside the La Kretz Innovation Campus, Purple Platypus is committed to providing advanced 3D printing technology, tools, and support to LACI and its customers.

“We are thrilled to be a part of LA’s cleantech hub and looking forward to the collaboration with LACI in promoting an innovative culture across Southern California,” says Mark Swart, CEO of Purple Platypus.

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Mark Swart, CEO of Purple Platypus

LA Cleantech members have complete access to the additive manufacturing center, which features both FDM (Fused Deposition Modeling) and PolyJet 3D printing technologies.  Additionally, they have access to a wet lab, electronics lab, CNC shop, and welding shop – all under one roof.

Members of the facility are encouraged to utilize the additive manufacturing center as a place to be innovative, develop prototypes, share design concepts with colleagues, and experience 3D printing demonstrations. This world-class facility also gives Purple Platypus a centralized location in Los Angeles to hold seminars, workshops, and meet with customers to discuss real-life applications in a professional environment.

The Broad Range of 3D Printng

Purple Platypus also has their own 3D printing service bureau, Purple Porcupine, for big companies who need 3D printing beyond their own 3D print capabilities, as well as providing service to individual inventors and entrepreneurs.  The uses of 3D printing are very broad.  There are many applications that are functional in the industrial world, and creative in the design world.  Clients from design, entertainment and medical industries benefit from the high-resolution, color, multiple-material output and use a technology known as PolyJet.  The other side of the coin is known as FDM (Fused Deposition Modeling), and is used more for building jigs or tools which can be easily replaced when the older tool needs to be decommissioned; these features appeal to their more industrial clients like aerospace and defense. Most 3D printing falls into one of these two functions and Purple Platypus will service these needs and do it very effectively.

Purple Platypus has worked with major hospitals where they have sent over a CT scan of a patient’s lung and made a 3D print utilizing rubber material.  The surgical team is then able to perform a pre-operation on the 3D model which is very cost effective, less obtrusive and much safer than traditional lung operations that don’t benefit from visualizing the procedure.  Their 3D printers have been used for the prototyping and manufacture of medical devices, as well as used in the courtroom where legal counsel needs to illustrate complex medical terminology to a jury who may not be savvy with medical aspects of the case.

Aerospace is another key industry which uses their 3D printing technology.  When aerospace companies have a part they need to fabricate, it could cost upwards of $100,000 if the part is made using conventional methods like aluminum cast, sand casting or injection molds. 3D printing that same part is simple and would provide significant savings on cost and production time.  Once a 3D CAD file is uploaded, the machine programs itself and is able to slice the part up into layers to prepare it for print, in the terms of $100 to $2000, and with a quick turn-around time of a few days, or even a few hours.

3D printing impacts so many sectors and has advanced the technology of aerospace & defense, architecture, automotive, commercial products, consumer products, dental, medical, academic and entertainment industries.

3D Printing Forum at La Kretz Innovation Campus

To kick-off the release of the new Stratasys J750, the world’s first full color multi-material 3D printer, and the Objet1000 Plus, the world’s largest multi-material 3D printer, Purple Platypus partnered with LACI and Stratasys to bring an exclusive 3D printing forum right into the heart of Los Angeles.

Attendees witnessed new leading-edge products in person, held beautifully printed full-color parts in hand, and heard it from Stratasys technologists on how 3D printing has improved their design cycle with untouchable versatility and uncomplicated workflow.

For more information on LACI and its programs, email info@alaincubator.org, go to newlaci.staging.wpengine.com or call (213) 358-6500.

 

Hyderabad and Ahmedabad Two Important Cities for Cleantech: Fred Walti – The Dollar Business

In India LACI has tied up with CIIE, IIM Ahmedabad’s Centre for Innovation Incubation and Entrepreneurship and T-Hub (Telengana Hub) of Hyderabad, for launching green tech incubators. Fred said he is also keen that other cities in India too would make a beginning in the field. Discussing the methods LACI would use in the penetration of markets, Fred said, “We will establish incubators for entrepreneurs and budding innovators and support them to penetrate the right market in any country.”

Happy Hour for Women Entrepreneurs & Investors

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Monday, October 24
6:30PM – 8:30PM
LA Cleantech Incubator (LACI)

 

Please join LACI and SheEO for an evening of networking and an introduction to two new initiatives for women entrepreneurs and investors in LA!

LACI’s Women in Cleantech Initiative is focused on increasing women’s participation (eventually expanding to other underrepresented populations) in the cleantech sector as entrepreneurs, advisors, employees, leaders, and investors by supporting gender diversity at an individual and institutional level.

SheEO’s #radicalgenerosity is an innovative new economic model to finance and support women entrepreneurs. Radical Generosity 2016 calls upon 1000 radically generous women in LA to contribute $1000 each to create a $1M fund that will be loaned to 10 local women-led businesses. The deadline to become an Activator and to apply for the funding is November 30th!

6:30 Registration & Networking

7:15 Program:
– Amanda Sabicer, VP of Development, LACI
– Delilah Panio, LA Lead, Radical Generosity 2016
– Featured Female Founder: Lauren Gropper, Founder & CEO, Repurpose®

7:45 Tour of LACI

8:00 Networking

 

Silicon Dragon Venture Salon LA

Silicon Dragon’s Salon features an evening of venture talk with investors, tech chats with entrepreneurs, pitches by founders, networking, food and drink

October 21, 2016
5:30pm – 8pm

Venture Capital Talks:
William Bao Bean, General Partner, SOSV China Accelerator, Shanghai Mike Prasad, Managing Director & Founding Partner, ventureLab, LA

Tech Chat:
Jeremy Goldkorn, Managing Director, Danwei (acquired by the Financial Times), Beijing/U.S.

5 Pitches with VC Feedback

MC: Rebecca Faninn, Founder/Editor, Silicon Dragon

Flyer for Silicon Dragon Venture Salon, plus links below:

Program, SDLASalon2016:

Sign-up: https://silicondragonsalonla2016.eventbrite.com

Silver Jubilee Celebrations

Managed by the Sikh Educational Society (SES), Sri Guru Gobind Singh Collegiates Public School, Sector 26, on Wednesday celebrated its silver jubilee with great enthusiasm and fervour. Hazuri raagis of Sri Harmander Sahib, Amritsar, Bhai Lakhwinder Singh and Bhai Ramanpreet Singh of Gurdwara Nadha Sahib performed kirtan after the bhog ceremony of akhand path. SES secretary Col JS Bala (retd) appealed the school staff to work with missionary zeal and utmost dedication as the Institution was named after the Tenth Guru. There should be a distinctive imprint on the psyche of students who pass out from this institution, he added. Apart from parents and alumni of the school, SGGS College Principal Dr Jyoti Lamba, GGS College for Women Principal Dr Charanjit Kaur Sohi and SGGS Pharmacy College Principal Jaswainder Kaur were also present. Student interaction at Panjab varsity President and CEO of Los Angeles Cleantech Incubator (LACI), USA, Fred H Walti II interacted with faculty members, students and a scientist from the Chandigarh Region Innovation and Knowledge Cluster (CRIKC) at Panjab University here on Wednesday. As many as 150 students and faculty members from different CRICK institutions participated in the interaction. Fred H Walti II spoke on the university-based Incubators in supporting student startups for clean tech entrepreneurship. “LACI is open to collaborate with the university-based incubator for mutual hosting of startups,” he informed. PU Vice-Chancellor Arun Kumar Grover also interacted with students to bring their startup ideas to the forefront and discuss the challenges faced by them. He also mentioned that the first challenge for students was to convince parents about the startup rather than opting for campus placement. — TNS