The Palm Beach Post

Amazon has another way to get Alexa into your house

- By Noah Buhayar

Amazon.com Inc. has shown a boundless desire to put its Alexa smart-home devices in every nook and cranny of people’s houses. Just last week, it announced a raft of new gadgets, including a microwave and clock.

Now it’s making its first bet on a homebuilde­r.

The Seattle-based internet giant is investing in a $6.7 million fundraisin­g round for Plant Prefab, a California company that manufactur­es modules that can be assembled quickly into a home at a job site.

The wager is being made through the Alexa Fund, a pool of capital Amazon created in 2015 to back startups working on new uses for voice technology.

“Voice has emerged as a delightful technology in the home,” said Paul Bernard, director of the Alexa Fund. “Plant Prefab is a leader in home design and an emerging, innovative player in home manufactur­ing.”

The manufactur­ed-home industry has long been associated with producing inexpensiv­e houses built for people in lower income brackets.

A recent crop of svtartups like Plant Prefab has set out to change that by working with architects to develop high-end designs that cater to wealthier customers who demand modern finishes and environmen­t-friendly materials.

Although glossy magazines have featured the homes, the market for them has been limited.

Plant Prefab, for instance, has produced only a few dozen projects for buyers in California and Utah since it was spun out of LivingHome­s in 2016, a design and developmen­t company.

That may now be changing. As constructi­on costs soar, cities are increasing­ly looking for ways to create housing more economical­ly.

San Francisco Mayor London Breed said she would commit $100 million to build hundreds of modular apartments to expand the stock

of affordable housing. A new factory in Chicago is set to start churning out components for a multifamil­y project in November.

“More people are looking for cost-effective alternativ­es” to site-built homes in urban areas, said Plant Prefab CEO Steve Glenn. “We’re focused on that market, and ultimately we’re out to build the first trusted, reliable national brand.”

Glenn said the money from the latest fundraisin­g round, which is also being backed by Obvious Ventures, could help his company expand from its current 62,000-square-foot factory in Rialto, Calif., to as many as four more locations in the next five years.

Amazon, for its part, is eager to maintain its lead over Google in the smarthome market.

The tech giants have been in a race to get more consumers to adopt the technology by selling low-cost “smart speakers” like the Amazon Echo Dot and Google Home Mini, which let customers experiment with the technology for about $40.

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