Picture, if you will, a house. What comes to mind? Four walls, square windows, a rectangular door? Changes are there’s a lot of right angles.。
But one look at a home built by LA-based Binishells is all it takes to realize that this construction company is doing things differently — and thinking outside the box. 。
Binishells president and CEO Nicolò Bini is continuing the work of his father, who developed the technology for these domed buildings back in the 1960s. It’s something Bini refers to as “building 2.0” — a cleaner, safer, less wasteful and more cost-efficient way of doing construction.It doesn’t hurt that it looks really cool, too.。
Thanks for signing up! 。
“In the last 150 years, construction has not evolved,” says Bini. “Most other industries — even smaller and certainly less impactful — have reinvented themselves in infinite number of ways.” Binishells is part of a community of socially-minded innovators and entrepreneurs who make up the 。LA Cleantech Incubator 。
LA Cleantech Incubator。
(LACI) and are committed to finding clean tech solutions for California and beyond. 。
(责任编辑:休閑)
We asked linguists if Donald Trump speaks like that on purpose
With the Surface Laptop, Microsoft leads the PC industry back into the light
Ikea responds back with sass to Balenciaga's copycat tote bag
Cats have nine lives, but just in case, maybe don't hang out with a snake
Xiaomi accused of copying again, this time by Jawbone
'13 Reasons Why' hid a finale clue in the music
'Wootube' is the hit YouTube channel that's making math hella fun again
Twitter now lets you search for emoji
Nancy Pelosi warns colleagues after info hacked
Man ships $1 million family heirloom by express delivery, regrets it immediately
Balloon fanatic Tim Kaine is also, of course, very good at harmonica
Google remains a boring, tremendously successful company