My project Camp Phoenix will be containerized housing for homeless and at risk veterans to help them transition back to conventional civilian lives. There are roughly three thousand homeless veterans struggling for survival here in the Atlanta area and this number is sure to grow broccoli forty seven percent of homeless veterans are from the Vietnam era and many Iraq and Afghanistan veterans returning had the same mental health risk factors which have contributed to elevated risk of homelessness among Vietnam veterans. Additionally approximately seventy six percent of homeless veterans suffer from mental illness or drug and alcohol abuse the thing that differentiates homosapiens from the general population is that they have access to free V.A. medical care the thing is all of the problems I mentioned are treatable but they require time and commitment. Camp Phoenix will be a self-contained solution featuring housing food shower laundry and recreation facilities in line for forward deployed bases such as bought Joint Base which is depicted behind me. Container out housing was chosen because it's an expensive simple to construct and familiar to veterans containerized housing can be made by installing basic electrical wiring and cutting a hole for an air conditioner a door in a window there will be dedicated trailers for a laundry and bathroom facilities as this will consolidate all the plumbing and hold down the cost of individual units Hippias will also focus on providing a good environment for everyone there will be a strong emphasis on mentoring with every new resident assigned to mentors one a more senior resident of the camp and the second a veteran from the Atlanta area who has volunteered to help. The camp will also initially provide employment to the veterans working at the camp providing clean and maintenance services once excessively worked at the camp for a period of time the staff will work on assisting them to find jobs that are known their company better known companies in the Atlanta area or with companies looking for federal tax breaks for hiring unemployed veterans. Funny will primary. We come from the Combined Federal Campaign which is a system of paycheck reductions from federal employees to Georgian military bases Fort Benning in Kings Bay donated their one point three million dollars to this campaign in two thousand and nine the key to these donations is the base military commanders as they can wield enormous influence on their nation patterns so it's just these two bases can deliver thirty percent of their donations that could fund operating costs for the entire year. The final hurdle is find a suitable location there must be a willing community that is close to the V.A. Medical Center and also close to Marta for future employment opportunities the location picked above is ideal between the V.A. Medical Center and the Georgia Department of Veteran Services and any questions. Thank you clearly have real need for this but the one point three million that's currently being is what is that money being used for today and how you going to be able to argue that that should be used for this project OK thank you for your question the one point three million dollars is currently split among the combined federal campaign there is a massive booklet of thousands and thousands of charities and when you apply for the one you have the slip form come to you you either check to donate to the general fund or you can specify which charity you would like to donate to my experience or the military is that most people donate to the general fund or they pick the charity of the funniest name not someone they donate to so there's very little emotional attachment as far as I know and my plan was be to get the base commanders the cell that has taken care of our in the military a very tribal culture we want to take care of our own people to pitch it that way that some of their troops have been out fighting for them will be homeless in the future and this is a way to put a down payment on protecting them right now and I feel like that's a very easy picture to make the senior military leaders. Thank you great presentation how do you anticipate dealing with this not not in my backyard syndrome of neighborhood reaction to the plan you know one of my our primary plans for that. The Especially the south of the Atlanta region is to rely on patriotism the fact that we are targeting only veterans these are people who went out and fought and served for their country and it's very little doubt that we can help that take some space in their community and take a slight risk to help these veterans out and also since they get the campus containerized if it ends up being a horrible disaster it can go away and do today's. Well thank you for protection Do you expect to run this or do you Management doesn't support you because there's just a lot of effort is going in our men to everything else my initial plan was for three people want to mention director one person for career service and one who was an expert on the V.A. because my general experience there is the paperwork is a nightmare so you need to have some of the very very focused on just V.A. outreach and also making sure people can keep it to their meetings at the V.A.. Hi. How do you how do you propose to provide more security do you have to get permits to have a housing project this size in Atlanta what are your plans to overcome all those bureaucratic hurdles that entail housing for people at this magnitude. But in terms of the bureaucratic things with security. Hopefully I mean it will be in the Atlanta area so have the base Atlanta police but hopefully some of these veterans I feel it will be selfless and self I mean many of them were military police while they were in the military I feel like they're with strong I think about the trouble culture to police themselves when they're living in a just military community and beyond that ideally will just rely solely on the Atlanta police for security but don't you see mill illness as being on the issues and dragging these individuals to the streets and if so just having a house having up house to live in that does that solve all the problems of course not but so how do you propose to really solve the long term problem which is the housing It's not have a problem well OK the long term problem is the a mental health Yes And we're going through the they have X.. Free V.A. medical care so we're really focusing on going on there and we're the thing is are there live on the street out here we can't realistically expect them to consistently make it to the V.A. to be treated that improve the thing is of this house and takes care of everything else in their life so they can just focus on treatment initially and that will hopefully saw the long term problems wonderful thank you for your time thank. You. Good afternoon ladies and gentlemen my name is Jared and I'm Ryan and I'm a call and we're urban repeal and these are solutions for metropolitan food waste. For some to give you a brief outline so we're going to go over the problem our solution some comparisons to existing alternatives and discuss economic he's ability so the urban food dilemma every year twelve percent of landfill waste in Georgia is food waste approximately half of that comes from the metro Atlanta area Georgia's Environmental Protection Division has acknowledged this is a huge problem yet they have not come up with the solution Additionally twenty five percent of fresh water resources and four percent of oil in America goes to producing food that will never be eaten and then we spend one billion dollars annually to landfill that. So our solution we propose to collect Atlanta's food waste and transport it to our urban warehouse setting where we'll Burma compost it using bread wigglers which eat their food way and eat their way in food waste daily producing nutrient dense act excrements called Worm casts and we then propose to bag the as worm casts and distribute them as an alternative to chemical fertilizers which deplete natural resources and require large amounts of energy to produce so the reason that herb or appeals. Good choices traditionally we either landfill or food which food waste which is expensive you have higher greenhouse gas emissions and it also requires a large amount of space we are now starting to send it to rural compost sites which is raising the transportation costs for this process and also requires a large amount of space in contrast urban repeal has minimal transport cost because we're in the city we have fewer greenhouse gas emissions and a smaller space requirement so essentially we're trying to remove the out of sight out of mind nature with which we usually deal with throwing away our food. And I mean talk a little bit about economic feasibility and the logistics of how our business is going to operate so in regards of market loop we're looking at potential clients to pick up food waste as would be hospitals schools corporate cafeterias restaurants and eventually maybe even apartment complex's And once we have the from a compost finished product we're looking to sell these at local retailers including Home Depot Ace Hardware and if your local hardware stores and also target local farms local. Landscapers and home gardeners So we have warehouse space priced out at about two dollars and seventy five cents per square foot in the West Atlanta area and there's already industrial scale equipment available to do the worm composting and so that's readily available. Based on our operating costs we came up with an average value of about a dollar and forty cents to produce twenty twenty pound bag of this from a compost that includes everything including transportation electricity costs so we plan to sell these twenty pound bags for around eight dollars if you compare that to something like Miracle Gro organic choice that sells for around forty dollars for a twenty pound bags we feel like we have a very strong economic cost advantage over the competitors so we're reducing the footprint with which we're getting rid of our food waste or providing cheap sustainable alternative to chemical fertilizers and we're keeping the food cycle local thank you very much thanks. Thank you. Thank you. How many worms do you need and where do you get them. That's a good question yet so the worms can actually eat like you said up to their to their weight in waste per day they can process that amount so I think we have spec'd out. We spec that out based on a ten pound wholesale worm cost we need. To spend approximately one hundred thousand dollars in worms so you need basically So I think six hundred pounds of worms per. Eight foot section in your reactor. There's actually you'd be surprised there's a lot of worm wholesalers. I think they're called worm farms Yeah actually eventually propose once we buy the worms we can actually have a reactor set up in our warehouse to create our own Burma culture and regrow our own worms so essentially we could probably buy less worms to start. Really clever presentation what are the competitive sustainable again not the the traditional landfill solutions what are some of the other solutions and has this one been tried it where else there has been large scale I'm industrial vermin composting but traditionally on farms so like in the agriculture and issue they are using large scale vermiculture but also like as an alternative right now there's a site about an hour outside of Atlanta where they do a robotic composting So it's like a thirty two acre site where they truck everything out of the city and then compost and distribute to farms so it requires a lot of space and also the main thing is the energy it costs to transport Exactly. It's a good presentation alleged incident of program to get sick of. People who are using Google which we would. Get into himself cost orders on the web you displayed all your was probably a cost of manufacture. We just don't want transportation which is a major cost and also so and commissions and distribution. Miracle grew in the truth. And because of the use of chemicals. Right if you're comparing apples and apples here. Well really commercially available there are very few natural fertilizers and the ones that are We've seen anywhere from eight dollars to twenty dollars for a twenty pound bag but there are transport costs are much higher so our Like in addition to being a natural eternity to the chemical fertilizer and hoping to push that are low cost is kind of a driving factor due to our locality so OK but. Can it help back to visit Yes I think that's quite all right and. We actually have some some literature available if you're interested we can provide you but then we actually have the composition of Irma compost and it has the nitrogen needed it has all of the nutrients needed OK. Thank you very much thank you OK as they're getting set up let's welcome sustainable sourcing I take action system Thank you. We're sustainable solicitation system My name's Emily Woods upon it and yes we will be talking about today it's kind of the taboo topic the unthinkable issue it's amazing something that we all deal with every day is really hard to talk about constructively or materially but this actually causing a huge problem in fact two point six billion people are without access to basic sanitation right now this calls up for one point six billion million to die annually from diarrheal diseases in fact it's one of the UN's focuses right now. In the millennium development goals what happens is pathogens in the fecal matter get into the food or water systems and cause disease like typhoid cholera or parasitic worms one of the worst is actually Ascaris which over one billion people are affected with today but how much we can get out of the and then it's really fun everybody could enter. It's amazing that with all the. Technological revolutions that have taken place in the last century there hasn't been a major innovation in sanitation technology see in developed countries we use flush toilets which waste up to five gallons of water per flush and because of the immense time and costs that go into making the infrastructure that are required by these devices they're really not practical for the developing world. They come in pit latrines is what's used in many developing countries and the problem with that is that it's both smelly and unsanitary because the feces merely sit in this pit and that introduces the possibility of contaminants leaking into the soil and the ground water supply. The newest household innovation is the composting toilet but that takes up to two years to compost human waste and even after those two years some of the most resilient pathogens might not be deactivated. So we knew we were looking at solutions we had to look at something that would really deactivate all the pathogens and legal matter as well as do in a timely manner so what we developed was a sustainable solar sanitation system which basically works the double fault latrine one of the vaults used to collect the fecal matter the other actually transfers it into a baking chamber and baking chamber if you look on the far left picture there is kind like a solar oven which uses a solar energy to convert it into high temperatures Kelly greenhouse effect heating people matter over sixty degrees Celsius this activates all the pathogens including Ascaris and a very short amount of time so what this does then render fecal matter able to use fertilizer like the past and so actually completes a nutrient cycle where the nutrients that we. Actually goes back into the ground yields have been shown to produce four to ten times as much actually using human who are in the ground so this money can then be used either as agricultural produce for the family or to be sold for profit completing the nutrient cycle. By creating an environmentally sustainable means of sanitizing waste and recycling nutrients This is a noble source annotation system is a major. Major innovation that's going to be needed to solve the global sanitation crisis. Thanks. Tony how large is this bread box I couldn't tell how it how large the box is about five cubic feet total so it's about maybe a metre long about metre and half wide and deep so it's easily carry ball in fact the carts that we're using. I guess there's a good picture we can get to in just seconds. Here So inside these boxes here it's the red a great carts which are really durable Tupperware containers that can stack are very lightweight and come on wheels and the cost per unit to the old uses So we're looking at less than two hundred dollars. For the entire system for the entire box the entire system isn't delivered. So like the latrine the baking chamber the one per hour as it one problem was like it would be like you know we're designing it for one per family of five produces about five cubic feet of matter per month and that's me but there are some countries and there were all the two hundred dollars Yeah so it is going to be something or looking at micro financing options for the great things about this is the revenue that will come back from increased agricultural yield a fantastic increase I go to realize also we're looking at the possibility of setting up someone to collect the fecal matter as fertilizer and have that be their whole business is then selling the fertilizer Absolutely I think to the extent that you can. Look at alternate distribution channels and some sustainability because the two hundred dollars is completely out of the price range for most of these families as you know less than what two billion people the world live on less than two dollars a day so when you look at that it just doesn't work the economics so to the extent you can get distribution other Any ideas with any model companies that you can look at that have. A solution that is low cost but at the same time is scalable if you look at collecting specifically fecal matter there's a couple different options right now there's people who empty out pit latrines and they actually get paid to come in there with a vacuum saying empty it out and so we're looking at that as well as the Indio are kind of partnered with in Bolivia they've actually been trying this out on the social scale of actually collecting everybody's fecal matter and then trying to deactivate it off site so it's actually not being detected on site and sanitary conditions are the problem but people are willing for other people come in and take their people with for free they're OK with that and the benefits from it aside are interesting OK one more question how you said it takes a short time to deactivate how short a time what is the so those are some of the tests are undergoing now askers has been proven to ask this is the most resilient such usually the tests that they do like testing for Cloud Cult forms and water treatment systems so right now they've seen that and less than an hour if you get over sixty degree Celsius but we're looking at higher volumes so we're looking at days to deactivate an entire five cubic feet chamber OK Wonderful thank you thank you. Thank you OK. Let's welcome to. Thank you. OK Good evening everyone and we really wanted to focus on it saying the question could we make volunteering more efficient more motivating more relevant. A lot of nonprofit organizations need resources people time and money these things come at a pretty high cost to them and that money could be going more efficiently toward the causes they support call in two years. Out of Nationals want to be a place where they can use their skills and they can do it in their time constraints with their own interests. And so to just kind of some of these problems that we just mentioned that professional volunteers will face we came up with Yucca which specifically is it kind of creates an atmosphere where professional volunteers get connected with nonprofit organizations and so more specifically Yucca is a website and what we do is we have two main focuses one is really connecting the people letting us or letting them learning their needs and then finding the nonprofit they really go with and having the non-profits come to us looking for volunteers and the second thing we do is that we provide a kind of tools for collaboration that let the nonprofits in the volunteer stay in contact with each other work on the project together things like that and so what we really kind of see with us one day is a world where a civil engineer living in California might come home from work and sit down at his computer and then check off on the on the plans for an orphanage in India per se. So one of the keep teachers at the ACA is the integrated project management tools and these enable. The projects to be done remotely and so to to create collaboration between the organization and the professionals we would use communication tools such as file sharing messaging and voices. And to organize the project we would use task management and scheduling tools. We believe that right now is the perfect time to create we've seen chance and its success in three and collaborative work models and the popularity and net and networking communities. And to keep her say cost effective we would utilize the help of volunteer web developers and also charge mall Cosper postings to maintain the site. So what's the bottom line we believe that if Price professionals are working on for causes that they're interested in using the skills they're talented in they'll be motivated to take action and that action can change the world thank you. Thank you thank you. Thank you very intriguing how do you think this is superior to some of the existing volunteer websites like Volunteer Match for example and I think a key part of it yes allows the projects to be done remotely So a lot of professionals want to help but they don't have the time to fully commit to maybe going somewhere traveling somewhere and they can fully use their And also fully use their professional skills so they can be done from their own home if it's their time and they can fully utilize their skills on a on a scale for the projects that works that. I think is a much needed. And creating awareness and. Spurning through money and marketing. People. That's for marketing Priyanka we really want to focus on using social media college career fairs and referrals a lot of young professionals are coming out of college. Really wanting to use their skills for the causes that they believe in and that are important to them social trends are becoming really important so we want to be able to use these outlets to get to those people who we know are starting to really care about social change around the world. There's a real need for this there's still many large charities that you're still using Excel spreadsheets is just amazing real need but one of the issues I think that some people have concerns with is how. How legitimate is the charity and or how aboveboard or legit are the volunteers and clearly that's an issue on both sides and yeah I think that's a big issue so one of the things that for us I can create their profile on our Yucca site they'll have to be prove that they are in fact a nonprofit organization they'll have a profile on the site that gives details to all of all that they do and to choose that to make sure that the professional is legitimate they'll be sort of. An interview process the professional will have a profile with all their skills and then once they've shown interest the organization professional can sort of talk over the phone voice over IP and so to make sure that there's a good fit and that they do have the skills they need to complete the project efficiently. OK thank you very much thank you thank you OK let's welcome one tab. Thank you. I bet. You're an. Art. You know. That. Both political. Parties I cough for you. There is a kernel of THERE'S of the products are marketed as portable E.C.G. systems. The courage centers the G.E. four hundred well it is portable in battery operated. It's the what holds us life back is that the signal is actually printed so there are cars on side analysis from of a trained professional and also calls over eleven hundred dollars plus the cost of printing this onsite analysis severely limits as target population and other smaller devices the car your phone if they would actually require an E.C.G. signal and transmit it but in order to transmit it has to go over a land line in this line like a next drug companies call center again acquiring more charges the device also doesn't have any kind of display which makes it a real trial and error as the patient is trying to acquire the signaller self the E.P.L. i Phone is devices able to display the E.C.G. and then transmitted over a cellular network but as a three lead system is designed solely for monitoring use is not a diagnostic tool it can to take the majority of cardiovascular diseases and it comes with a subscription cost of Earth two hundred fifteen dollars per month so when analyzing this is essential need for a portable efficient you know accurate E.C.U. system for developing countries who are satisfied with any of the current products and this led us to the development of one tab so one tab is a device that is capable of recording and transmitting data over the tell you in that work for professional analysis it will utilize. Tough week system which will allow accurate screening of cardio related diseases they were running a battery you well you saw you know work to transmit data from a remote location to a to a physician who in another area it will be mostly built using recyclable phone parts so this will reduce electronic waste and this will also. Make it less cock once more cost efficient also it will not have an exercise charge for the use service charge but only charge for the use of the say in that work finally we're utilizing the software that will guide the user with onscreen step by step instructions so one tap is a device that is capable that is accurate portable inexpensive user and environmentally friendly. So one potential business model OK time's up. Sorry OK let's go let's go let's go back to a. Let's hope that you might get that question from the judges. Exactly judge it's up to you let's keep this cos you heard our target cost is less than three hundred dollars for each unit OK And you got about of this yourself I mean I was clear about that you develop a space. In this get it yourself it. Well I mean we're planning on using. Smartphones as the core of our product and might be some assembly or additional components that we would add to it but mainly would be a smartphone it would retain it so your phone capabilities so tell me again the business plan so we're hoping that we could form a partnership with a corporation or a large company that gives its employees smartphones and we would be able to collect those through or cycling program with the company so they would be acting as a sponsor donor for us or we would be purchasing these phones from them that have you know a very rich. Cost once we have the phones we would be assembling then and installing software and packaging and locally and then we would be shipping them for sale either directly or through an international medical supplies distributor. Into himself or. Order just to go good for forks which was new so we were together. Well that's the idea with the you know getting recycled parts. Also we would be you know contributing to the reduction of electronic waste which is another issue that we wanted to take on with the project of the site but with. By using recycled components you know it would greatly reduce the cost and sort of purchasing a new. We are we may do so that they would be able to be operated by in a someone with no medical experience at all be volunteer the the software that would be putting on it would provide step by step instructions for lead placement and signal acquisition acquisition and then you would be able to send the signal off for professional analysis so there's no need for a doctor like even nurse training on site. There are there are current products and you know in more developed countries such as Holter Monitor is in stuff where they can connect to the Internet to send their signals off but then just same thing is in a country like India where the health care system isn't that great they actually have several major cellular carriers that provide basically complete coverage in India so you could you know go out to these very spread out. Populations take these signals with very little training send them back. Two you know that doctors are not very common in that country to be able to get a professional analysis. We're currently working on getting a functioning prototype right now but. OK. Don't open windows or go to rural yourself and go to school so. I don't post it I mean this this one issues are an absolute at but that considering the rarity of medical devices in this country is this using cellular network is not such a bad option when they have so many carriers OK thank you very much thank you welcome incinerate Thank you. That's it. My name's a Christian while I'm a mechanical engineering senior here in Georgia Tech and what my proposition I guess who are jumping to the next slide already that's me but anyways before we get to that I actually want to take my objective is to reduce the weights that we have in our world today combat that issue so I want everybody to bear with me I want you all to imagine throwing all your trash into the streets and into your backyard and then once a week instead of waste management I want you to burn that trash and I want you to raise your hand if that would scare you. OK I want to look around now and see all those handsome arrays there were a ton of hands this is a problem in developing. Trees nowadays and in our world today we just we throw it away in developed countries out of sight out of mind but this is me going to Cameroon I got to experience this firsthand and when we left ever asked this. Well this is a burning trash is actually how they handle their trash right now in developing countries they just burn it they throw it in the streets and burn it you can see all that toxic waste it's awful this is never asked this before we left yes my fiance and I how we would handle this trash problem so I had to thinking about it and I finally realized they burned their trash we burn our trash in the United States how do we do it we do it in a big incinerator but that's too big for a developing country so what if you shrunk that down and made it modular that's the end waste incinerator is to chamber power ALSO system it's clean burning it can it can burn off food to plastic waste and nine to fifteen pounds per day which is about what we produce actually more than what we produce in the United States who produce about thirty pounds of trash so this is a two fold problem we have developed countries in developing countries in the developing countries sixty percent of recognize trash goes uncollected and it's open burnt toxic fumes and then the trash and the pruning their agriculture here we see take about one hundred thirty two million tons of trash going to landfills and that's lost energy not recovered so I propose a twofold solution for the developed countries you run a for profit business with a modular waste incinerator that that you chamber pyrolysis system and manufacture and sell high tech and that you put on the back your house press the button once once a week burn off all your trash and hopefully with some energy recovery but it would have to follow the emissions standards the United States and then developing countries you have a low tech M.W. I would be completely analog no electricity and it would be all made out of local materials and to be completely affordable through the subsidy of the for profit business. Any questions. Thank you. There is a lot to get through I'm sorry. You know. About the electricity on. The End So actually that's what we're developing right now this is a two chamber power ALSO system this is a few chamber In fact here's the prototype they're working on right now for the fuel chamber of the power also and so all it does it burns the waste in there and it's a start there process which is what Powell says that gasified the waste sends the harmful exhaust back through through this into the fuel Where then is then combusted I should these little combusted in the chamber and here it has to be one thousand one hundred degrees Celsius for two seconds and based off our models that we're working on currently that is achievable. The fuel actually for the developed the developing country one would be anything would it. Was a really good one that's what this runs off of it's actually a cook stove you would use it for cooking though that's no no. But what this is actually the same concept it actually gasified the wood in the wood gas comes off mixes with secondary air and that combusts is a gas so it's completely clean burning and the combustion temperatures get up to him house I want to agree See that's why we're looking for that so I love the idea of having the for profit U.S. subsidy or the Europe subsidize great idea very successfully with a number of companies talk with us a little bit about again what is still the distribution model in the developing world so. You still have to be run is something that I've been mulling over originally my plan was Tom shoes one for one model but because you know this is something that's going to take a lot of social change and it's something that you wouldn't think of and everybody wants wear shoes so Tom shoes works great but it doesn't work well for this because you. Have to actually educate so you'd still not only would have to subsidize it but you'd have to work with non-profits like I work with Engineers Without Borders and this cookstove project is something that I talked to somebody who developed the cookstove and now I'm going to Cameroon talking to ever ss in our village contacts about implementing it because they actually wanted to be implemented and that's another nice thing about the engineers up water system is you go and you only go to villages that ask for help so they say we need help so they're already looking for a solution and we're just here to offer that solution what's the cost on that get approximate approximate it has to be between for the for the developing country one whatever you can cover your margins to subsidize it for developing countries but for the developing country one between fifty and seventy dollars is what I've what I've read is the max that you can actually put it in certain areas for it to be affordable for them for a community. Yes it could service an area or can service a home if they're wealthy enough but chances are they won't be so chances are you have a large incinerator that maybe one person maybe they can set up a business and one person is goes around and it's like they're your trash in the incinerator and do things like that OK great thank you so much thank you thank you and the last team that are going to need you all. Here. And. Over a hundred. And. This farm bill passed the proverbial farm and there are a lot of reasons why urban agriculture feel important and why don't you be doing it and I hope you're here in Atlanta one of those on the phone. With me one of those this is the owner and they're treating for the world of the past twenty years the National Center for Atmospheric Research and public study published last year shows over the drought in the States and the past and years. Moving in and in the future we're going to face droughts that are worse than the Dust Bowl and this is again according to the federal government the national center perhaps for research and already our communities are facing hunger and as just one form of prepared in these communities so what I'm proposing here is an integrated living system in food production so low cost high tech system that allows me to take the urban waste mass in the form of expend grain from breweries spend. Around a few coffee shops just kind of savor like one ship from arborists bring that in my facility here and I can grow a variety of different foods I can grow organic South created or lamb washrooms sustainable for. Most are. The only and product of this process explaining that process is called from a compost we will do this for a multi-state conversion process I do best practices. Much producing industry small scale instead of mushroom industry as the best practices from the Onyx industry and integrated together to get a low cost savings of energy cost savings so our it is like sponsor it is the issue of The Last Supper or natural agriculture here in Atlanta or residing at the retreat urban farm and all four limbs up on the site in four of our three houses there. And once once our homes are out of business and one of my business of home. On only six months out of around if you really expect there are certain specific time. All of you will get in to continue my car or ship with the product group and obviously sacrifice to inspire design to do research further research education and workforce or the training of the product of our partner as Minister of workforce and offer that. Grants and so these are the numbers on. Your ball and her station and if Thank you to a. New to me more would come much and would do more shroom to. Reduce. The amount of US troops are there lots of organ. Primarily in work from. If you break down the divine enough to bring into the system and render it through in the compound those which can then be used to feed the side of the system so that folks who are integrated and so the modern compost is actually USE of each side if you feed. On the fish and the and the. Evidence you have editors are very good at saying. Every question about some of the other we know Washington post of yours and. Others and it was more careful of you fellow directions at farmer's markets. And restaurants were will be able to provide the freshest fish you can be able to get and you want for a fresh mushrooms The only thing to get. From its nose actually play in the boat and it's a slim offical vision and integrate it together to get those those Each back the politics that I'll be able to get from this because this is. This is an innovative and the next step in the urban agriculture if the worst problem solved. Problems are on the CD That's my that's the problem you know. I know this is more immigration so right regular stable agriculture it gets out of hand years of US and any person or for. Urban I do want to like a good one at farms. Farms for it to get to us that ideally if I have to spare the most innovative and use you're going to dollars for it but you have to get forty dollars for. It. Is worth it. So one of the one of the thank you this is a great. Puzzle one of the values of urban agriculture is that it can feed provide food for audiences that don't have good access to healthy food is that is that part of your market for this because I'm just wondering if these products are are needed. By the. Yes some of them are I'm thirsty so the question is preventable motherhood in the last law firms are very well about and differentiated market. Right now. I get your ten dollars a pound for a month and something most of our WAS were over what we're very interested. About the other part of this which allows us to you know from compete with organic brains and. Fish and some of them maybe not even the mushrooms and then you'll be able fish and South Koreans will be a part of the system OK thank you very much. But they're talking let's get these teams or other hand to a. Sense of the order of the award. That will be announcing are the second and third the first and second runner ups which turns out that we have two first runner ups because there was a tie and I'm just going to have to up the prize for another team to. Make that runner up then we will announce. A special great ghost award and I'll let our judge say what that is for when he makes that announcement and then last we will make the People's Choice Cohen. OK after Gray Ghost will be the people's choice and then we'll do the first place award OK OK got that OK so who's going first. That China there's the tie for the second runner up and. Well Penny and John come up and do their announcement. And give their awards. Second or. Just because you're. First of all congratulations to all of you these were fabulous ideas we want to see all of them in production and and we thank you for the energy and creativity that went into them and the first first runner up award is for one tab Thanks. To the judges felt that this was a very warm story a very important product that has a great potential in the developing world so good luck to you. Thank you. The next first runner up award goes to the. One of the birds these folks boarded up today and made a terrific present taken in center right. Here right now. So it's great that's. Great thanks aaron Well you can then do you are going to get the word but it's part. Of a sort of wonderful international that is focused on urban appreciations people below the dollar. Limit so productive. I. Enter or. Have. You. Think Let's. Just go. OK we have the final one is but this evening. This is your what is the People's Choice Award and. And I'm sure you have the time as we get to choose the winners here but here they are the first winner is urban repeal. Thank you thank you. Thank you thank you. And now Karen Robinson is going to tell us who the winner is and who well whoever has not. Otherwise a first prize winner or runner up gets an honorable mention and I would like to say everyone up here on the stage is a winner all Georgia Tech students are winners and these people are especially when there's today. I'm a serial entrepreneur and my hat goes off to each and every one of you they were brilliant ideas and it was a very very tough decision what we look at is the how big the problem was the ability what your solution was and how feasible we thought it was as well as how unique it was was hard but we ended up with urban repeal thank you thank you. Thank you. Thank you.