Why this Houston innovator believes 2023 will be a year for resiliency innovation implementation
For Richard Seline, a major advocate for resilience innovation across Houston and beyond, 2022 was a year of recognizing new technologies and processes — as well as threats — to resiliency.
However, 2023 is the year to implement, he says on this week’s episode of the Houston Innovators Podcast.
“What really happened in 2022 is the recognition that there are enough technologies, equipment, and data science tools that if you were to deploy all of that more efficiently and effectively, you’re going to get a one-to-six better cost benefit. It’s kind of a no-brainer,” says Seline, co-founder of the Resilience Innovation Hub, a national organization headquartered in Houston.
One big win of 2022 was Houston Community College announcing its Resilience Center of Excellence program, including a 65,000-square-foot, $30 million Resiliency Operations Center, which will be built on a five-acre site HCC’s Northeast campus. The complex is scheduled to open in 2024. The programming, which is supported by JP Morgan Chase, will be dedicated to preparing a resilient workforce.
A prepared workforce is one part of the equation. The other is elevating and supporting new companies and technologies that can have an impact within resiliency, which touches a myriad of industries — sustainability, construction, smart city, communication, and more.
Seline and his collaborators have plans to roll out a program to connect these resiliency innovators with the right funding, network connections, and more. Seline says he doesn’t want to create a whole new accelerator program. Rather, he wants to create an organization that connects alumni from existing accelerator and incubators — like MassChallenge, Greentown Labs, gener8tor, and others — to act as an additional network and resource for resiliency.
“The Resilience Venture Lab would be the finishing school, so to speak,” he explains, adding that the program can help startup founders find funding, mentors, early customers, and more in an industry vertical the founder might not have considered expanding into before.
After years of resilience innovation rising in need and awareness, Seline says the stars have aligned for execution this year.
“We think that 2023 is the year of implementation,” Seline says on the show. “It’s all aligning within the resources, the insurance, the incentives, new codes and regulations.”
Seline shares more about what all he expects to see in 2023 in terms of resilience innovation in the podcast. Listen to the interview below — or wherever you stream your podcasts — and subscribe for weekly episodes.