Chattanooga Times Free Press

‘We’re all entreprene­urs’

Boyd keynote speaker at Chamber’s Spirit of Innovation awards ceremony

- BY TIM OMARZU STAFF WRITER

Branch Technology, a Chattanoog­a startup company that’s going to build what it calls the world’s first 3-D printed house here, was the winner Wednesday of the Chattanoog­a Area Chamber of Commerce’s Spirit of Innovation award.

The company was drawn here from Montgomery, Ala., in 2014 by the Gig Tank, a 12-week “accelerato­r”

“The burden is on us. We’re all entreprene­urs, you’re all entreprene­urs and each of you has got what it takes.”

– STEPHEN CULP, SMART FURNITURE CEO

program of the Company Lab that helps startup businesses get going, said Platt Boyd, the founder and CEO of Branch Technology.

But Chattanoog­a’s spirit was another draw, he told the crowd gathered for the awards luncheon at the Chattanoog­a Convention Center.

“It is a spirit that is unafraid,” said Boyd, who cited the hang-gliding community here, downtown’s redevelopm­ent and EPB’s highspeed gigabit-per-second internet as ways in which Chattanoog­a displays it fearlessne­ss.

Branch Technology, which is located in the Business Developmen­t Center on the North Shore, recently had to hire more employees and install more free-form robot arm 3-D printers for a project its doing in Miami, Boyd said.

Branch also held a contest with a $10,000 reward that drew entries from around the world to design a free-form 3D-printed house it will build next year on the campus of Chattanoog­a State Community College.

Chattanoog­a’s “entreprene­urial ecosystem” has come a long way from 25 years ago, Smart Furniture CEO Stephen Culp told the Chamber audience. Culp, who co-founded a number of startups here, said the “drag-and-drop” online design feature Smart Furniture introduced in 1999 became the industry standard.

“We were kind of a rag-tag bunch,” Culp said of Chattanoog­a’s startup scene then.

Culp reeled off a list of efforts that have changed things since then, from the three decades old River City Co., a public-private partnershi­p that’s helped revive downtown, to the Dynamo Accelerato­r and its related $18 million venture capital fund that launched this year to nurture startup businesses in the logistics, transporta­tion and supply chain business.

“The best, I’m pretty positive, is yet to come,” Culp said.

Yet, he warned that Chattanoog­a shouldn’t rest on its laurels and become the “most self-congratula­tory” mid-sized city in American.

Crime, education and poverty are all big issues that need attention, he said.

Culp said Chattanoog­ans have the entreprene­urial know-how and spirit to work together to come up with innovative solutions to those social problems.

“The burden is on us,” he told the crowd. “We’re all entreprene­urs, you’re all entreprene­urs and each of you has got what it takes.”

Other finalists for the Spirit of Innovation award were Meditract, a business that helps healthcare organizati­ons manage contract workflows, and Skuid, a company that lets companies create apps for their business “without writing a single word of code.”

Along with the Spirit of Innovation Award presentati­on, the Chattanoog­a Technology Council honored Early Innovator companies Aegle Gear, Collider and i-Card. The Young Innovator Award, presented by Office Depot, recognized fifth-grader Maya Halenar and seventh-grader Jackson Manning, both at Normal Park Museum Magnet, and 12th-grader Ellie Betts, STEM School Chattanoog­a.

 ?? STAFF PHOTO BY ANGELA LEWIS FOSTER ?? Platt Boyd, right, founder and CEO of Branch Technology, talks with Cam Doody during the Spirit of Innovation Awards luncheon and expo Wednesday at the Chattanoog­a Convention Center.
STAFF PHOTO BY ANGELA LEWIS FOSTER Platt Boyd, right, founder and CEO of Branch Technology, talks with Cam Doody during the Spirit of Innovation Awards luncheon and expo Wednesday at the Chattanoog­a Convention Center.
 ?? STAFF PHOTO BY ANGELA LEWIS FOSTER ?? Andy Golden, Patricia Diaz and Charlie Moss, from left, with Skuid, talk during the Spirit of Innovation Awards luncheon and expo Wednesday at the Chattanoog­a Convention Center.
STAFF PHOTO BY ANGELA LEWIS FOSTER Andy Golden, Patricia Diaz and Charlie Moss, from left, with Skuid, talk during the Spirit of Innovation Awards luncheon and expo Wednesday at the Chattanoog­a Convention Center.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States