Success Stories

Success Stories

  •    
    ​Today, Israel is creating more and more collaborative efforts with the U.S than at any other point in history. Israeli innovation and technology is proving to change the lives of many Americans as it is revolutionizing the way people exist. The Consulate aims to highlight success stories on behalf of Israeli innovation and technology in the U.S.
  • icon_zoom.png
    SCIENCE AND TECHNOLOGY SCIENCE AND TECHNOLOGY
     
     
  •  
  • Advantix air-con empire built on Ice and Salt

  •  
    The Israeli inventors took their ice-skating rink technology and put it into efficient air-conditioning systems used by businesses across the world.
     
    Advantix being installed at a client site.

    Advantix being installed at a client site.

     
    When three Israeli brothers back from vacation decided to start a recreational ice-skating business in Israel, they came up against the obvious challenges of making ice float in the Middle East: heat, humidity and high energy bills.
    Taking a slab of Dead Sea salt and inspired by the way the lowest place on earth sucks up water from the atmosphere, a new cooling idea was born.
     
    Spread the Word
    • Email this article to friends or colleagues
    • Share this article on Facebook or Twitter
    • Write about and link to this article on your blog
    • Local relevancy? Send this article to your local press
    Dan, Tom and Mordechai Forkosh, with their father and uncle, eventually went on to build 22 slush-free ice rinks in Israel and Europe using their patented energy-saving approach.
    And since 2010, their company Advantix has been applying the same basic approach — using salt and a heat pump — to take a bite out of the industrial air-conditioning systems market around the world.
     
    Hannah Choi Granade, US-based company president, tells ISRAEL21c: “The men were familiar with the concept of using salt as a liquid desiccant [moisture-attracting drying agent]. The science was out there but no one had tried it on the market.”
     
    This is an Advantix rooftop unit.
    This is an Advantix rooftop unit.
     
    It was then tried, tested and found true. While the thousand or so Advantix air conditioners installed today don’t contain the original Israeli Dead Sea salt –– they use an abundant lithium chloride salt instead –– Israeli ingenuity is very much crystallized in the new business.
     
    Twice as energy efficient
    Granade, an American, says: “The Dead Sea is actually a water-attracting material. People float higher at the Dead Sea because it is so incredibly salty ––and these extreme salt levels attract moisture from its surroundings.”
     
    The Advantix systems work in the same way, with a regular compressor.
    The company has a number of products but its DX system is basically an air conditioner that can be installed by a regular technician. Additional “green” software-linked solutions can improve energy savings further.
     
    Whereas current technologies freeze surrounding air until it reaches a dew point, and then reheat the air to a comfortable temperature, this process makes for “clammy” air, with humidity up to 60 percent. This type of environment leads to mildew and mold buildup and interferes with the normal sweat response of people. It’s an especially difficult problem in gyms and in industrial processes requiring low humidity, such as pharmaceutical and food-packaging plants.
    This is an Advantix rooftop unit.
    This is an Advantix rooftop unit.
     
    The Advantix approach is new. Instead of drip coolers that create wastewater, a salt solution absorbs water from the air. When the solution gets too dilute, heat from the machine’s engine gets pumped back in to evaporate the excess water. Therefore, the process is constantly renewed inside the system.
     
    “That’s what’s innovative in our invention: It uses captured heat and a warm salt solution to regenerate itself,” Granade says.
     
    Drier and healthier
    In most instances, cost savings are instant. In more extreme cases, where mold and mildew have become a problem, return on investment is about two years.
    There are huge health advantages to tackling this all-too common issue.
    “The salt solution captures bacteria and dries it out and stops it from spreading,” Granade says. “They call it the Dead Sea for a reason. Salt is a natural, non-toxic way to kill things.”
    Hannah Choi Granade, president of Advantix Systems.
    Hannah Choi Granade, president of Advantix Systems.
     
    The result is cool and dry conditioned air –– a boon for germ-prone nursing homes, schools and hospitals. And because dry air feels cooler than humid air, Granade explains, the cooling effect can be accomplished at a higher temperature, thereby saving energy.
     
    Typical customers are industrial and institutional. Manufacturers like Procter & Gamble, schools like Montessori, restaurants like Hooters, and hotels like Hilton are finding that Advantix offers across-the-board pluses beyond the 40 to 50 percent energy savings compared to traditional units.
    Business is going well from the appropriately sourced location of Sunrise, Florida. The company has offices also in Israel, Mumbai and now Shanghai as it breaks into Asian and North American markets. Advantix systems are manufactured on Kibbutz Hahotrim north of Haifa, and the company employs 170 people worldwide.
     
    Advantix is especially relevant for humid climates, but also anywhere where energy savings is an issue.
  • Jobniks is helping home-based services with buyers!

  •  
    Seeking a tutor, manicurist or personal chef right in your neighborhood? Or are you offering those services? Jobniks is for you.
     
    The app gives you a map of goods and services providers in your area.

    The app gives you a map of goods and services providers in your area.

     
    If you run a little cottage industry – say, hair styling or computer repair – many of your potential customers are right in your neighborhood. But getting the word out can be difficult, expensive and time-consuming.
     
    It was for this purpose that Jobniks is launching a beta app in Israel, Los Angeles and San Francisco.
     
    Spread the Word
    • Email this article to friends or colleagues
    • Share this article on Facebook or Twitter
    • Write about and link to this article on your blog
    • Local relevancy? Send this article to your local press
     
    “Jobniks creates a map of goods and services being sold by people in close proximity to one another. So you can buy cakes from Jodi down the block, and Mike across the street can hire you to teach his daughter piano,” the website for the app explains.
     
    About two years ago, Zeev Dzialoshinsky read in a local Israeli paper about a financially strapped woman peddling pastries from her own kitchen to a local restaurant. Diners liked her baking and the restaurateur ordered more, but to make enough income she had to build up her business with other area establishments as well.
     
    Dzialoshinsky thought there must be a better way. So he recruited his entrepreneur son, Koby, to help him create a platform for micro-business owners, like the Israeli home baker, to target potential customers in their own backyards more easily.
     
    Through an innovative geo-location app available on iOS and Android, Jobniks recognizes where you are. It lets the people you’re looking for – and the people who are looking for you — know that you’re nearby. You can chat, call and email at the touch of a button.
     
    Initially, Jobniks was a website, but then Koby’s economist wife Ronit joined the effort and suggested that mobile offered a better way for service providers and potential clients to communicate and connect to each other, Koby Dzialoshinsky tells ISRAEL21 from Shanghai, where his architectural business Solrox is based.
     
    “From there we built what services we wanted to have people offer,” he says. “We spoke to friends to see what they wanted.”
     
    Koby and Ronit currently live in Los Angeles, and decided to launch the free app in two California cities as well. “It’s being developed in Israel, but the real potential is in the US,” he says. “Once we have established momentum, we will go into other cities.” A launch in Australia, where Koby spent his childhood, is about six months down the line.
     
    Zeev, the CTO with a background in information technology, oversees Jobniks’ Israeli operation out of an office in Rishon LeZion.
     
    A fair chance for everyone
    Among Israelis, the term “jobnik” refers to a non-combat soldier. The trio thought the name worked well in English too, because it’s easily pronounceable and catchy. Dzialoshinsky, 27, says it brings a smile to people’s faces.
    The founders asked friends which categories they’d like to see.
    The founders asked friends which categories they’d like to see.
    “The reason we created Jobniks is to help people and build communities,” says the young entrepreneur, who put up much of the money to finance the app.
     
    “As you know, people from around the world have been taking to the streets to protest rising prices and stagnating incomes. Corporate profits have been rising, while the average person has been struggling. I really felt I needed to do more.”
     
    And this app does aim to do more. Not only does Jobniks offer you a better solution for earning money, saving money and supporting your community, says Dzialoshinsky, but it also will list area food banks and carpools. A “Rentnik” category will allow users to list items they can rent out, such as wedding dresses, tools, designer bags or jewelry.
     
    Dzialoshinsky is not looking to make money on the app.
     
    “Investors wanted to charge people to use the app, and we fought hard to remain free always, but we will allow advertisements for our service providers,” he says. “That will roll out in the next few months.”
     
    For now, the emphasis is on maximizing the list of participating goods and services providers, and partnering with organizations such as women’s leadership groups, government unemployment agencies and community centers.
     
    At the end of the day, he says, “We’ll find a way to realize profit, but not on the backs of our users. We want to give them all a fair chance.”