Lucy Guo is neighbors with David Beckham, however don’t ask her what he appears to be like like.
“Each white man appears to be like the identical to me, so I’ve been within the elevator with David Beckham just a few instances and I didn’t realize it was him,” the tech developer, designer and investor informed The Publish. “The one motive I discovered after was as a result of my associates had been within the elevator with me saying, ‘Oh my God, that was David Beckham.’”
However the soccer legend, who co-owns the MLS workforce Inter Miami CF, almost certainly is aware of who Guo is.
The 27-year-old has not endeared herself to her neighbors within the One Thousand Museum tower, the place condos go for $6 million to $33 million. (Guo reportedly paid $6.7 million for hers.) In February, she threw a small banquet that become a raucous soiree with greater than 100 hackers — invited final minute through Twitter, naturally.
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“Individuals have totally different definitions of a celebration, however to me, it was quite a lot of engineers standing round speaking about their tasks, the way forward for net 3 and crypto,” she stated.
However then there have been the social gathering’s different friends: a lemur and snake, which had been rented from the Zoological Wildlife Basis. (The infant tiger she wished was not accessible.)
“The lemur was very well behaved,” Guo added. “It was very pleasant and didn’t get freaked out by the noise and folks. Actually, it was just about hugging and licking everybody.”
Evidently, she obtained a letter from the constructing’s Owners’ Affiliation detailing her violations — together with life-safety points, overcrowding, smoking and “interfering with different residents’ peaceable use and pleasure of their properties.”
“I did get scolded by the HOA,” she stated. “And, in all equity, I in all probability deserved it.”
Including salt to the wound, Guo shared the letter on her Instagram tales, with the caption, “My HOA hates me,” and it went viral. It could possibly be seen as whining, or maybe bragging concerning the state of affairs. However Guo tends to carry nothing again on social media.
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And that’s precisely what’s made her a hit.
Guo is a part of a brand new era of highly effective programmers, who mix their tech savvy with unfiltered observations plastered throughout social media. Amongst her friends, she’s distinguished herself as some of the outrageous — and profitable — gamers in Silicon Valley. Actually, on the age of 23, Guo was anointed as one of many “30 Below 30 In Enterprise Tech” by Forbes in 2017.
She discovered how you can code when she was in second grade in her native San Francisco. Guo’s dad and mom, who immigrated from China, had been each electrical engineers, however they dissuaded her from the career — together with her mom saying it was too laborious for ladies to achieve success within the subject.
In center faculty, Guo created one of many first Twitter bots, which allowed customers to auto-follow primarily based on particular hashtags. She began competing in hackathons — interactive occasions that deliver laptop programmers collectively to enhance upon or construct new software program — in highschool, and was accepted to Carnegie Mellon for faculty.
After two years, she utilized to and was awarded the $100,000 Thiel Fellowship, created by entrepreneur and PayPal co-founder Peter Thiel to incentivize college students 22 and youthful to drop out of faculty and create a startup or pursue scientific analysis.
“In tech, it was nearly a cool factor to drop out as a result of all these individuals beginning massive firms had been dropouts,” Guo stated. “So, once I had the chance too, I used to be like, ‘Why not? What’s my worst-case situation?’ I had already been supplied jobs so I knew I might land someplace, plus save two years of tuition.”
Guo labored on the crowd-sourced Q&A web site Quora for just a few months earlier than being employed by Snap, the place she was the corporate’s first feminine designer and on the workforce designing localized tales for founder Evan Spiegel’s ardour venture, Snap Maps.
However Guo shortly felt the need to innovate for herself. Inspiration struck in an Uber when she struck up a dialog together with her driver, who advisable she meet Paige Craig, the angel investor who coined the time period “Silicon Seashore.”
“I seemed up Paige on Twitter and he was already following me,” she recalled. “So I simply DMed him and was like, ‘Hey, I’m fascinated by leaving Snap, form of need to do a startup. Are you able to give me recommendation, suggestions, no matter?’ We met up and afterwards he supplied me 1,000,000 {dollars} in funding.
“I had simply gotten into Y Combinator on the similar time, so I stated, ‘Hey, I don’t need to take 1,000,000 {dollars}, however I actually such as you and I’d love you on the cap desk [as a company shareholder with equity], so I’ll simply take 100K.’ He’s very comfortable about his 100K funding.”
At Y Combinator, a 12-week accelerator program that has incubated main tech firms like Dropbox and Twitch, Guo and her companion, Alexandr Wang, developed a number of concepts for a startup.
Finally they hit on the thought to merge machine studying with individuals, or “API for people,” which grew to become the corporate Scale AI. It really works with firms that want to research hundreds of thousands of information factors, reminiscent of for a self-driving automobile.
Scale AI blew up and is now valued at $7.3 billion {dollars}. It really works with firms that want to research hundreds of thousands of information factors, reminiscent of for a self-driving automobile.
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“We used a workforce of people to label the information and, concurrently, we had been capable of prepare machine studying fashions,” Guo stated. “Machine studying makes the perfect guess, and the people go in and proper the machine studying’s mistake. It’s cheaper for the corporate and so they nonetheless get essentially the most correct information.”
Purchasers have included Uber, GM Cruise, Alphabet and Liberty Mutual.
At this time, Guo, who’s single, is not with Scale AI, though she retains her fairness. Now, because the founding father of Backend Capital, which invests in startups, Guo can dwell wherever and has hung out rotating between Los Angeles, New York and Singapore, the place she spent the primary three months of the pandemic.
“I had been homeless for 2 years,” she says earlier than shortly correcting herself: “I used to be a nomad with out an deal with.”
In December 2020, she was lured to Miami through Tweets from associates like Delian Asparouhov, a principal at Founders Fund and co-founder and President of Varda House Industries; Keith Rabois, co-founder of Opendoor and basic companion at Founders Fund; and Jack Abraham, founding father of funding fund Atomic, who had been main the cost for Miami turning into the following Silicon Valley.
A yr later, she purchased the 4,727-square-foot luxurious pad on the Zaha Hadid-designed One Thousand Museum. Now, her assortment of Pokemon slippers, stuffies and paintings resides there, together with a Swarovski-crystal Pokemon necklace by streetwear artist and jewellery designer Dan Life. Guo additionally has a Mutant Ape NFT and a multimedia piece by artist ThankYouX, who pairs bodily canvases with NFTs.
An enormous Twitter consumer, Guo is a fan of potential new proprietor Elon Musk. “If I had been as wealthy as Elon Musk, I’d be doing the stuff he does,” she stated. “He’s humorous for positive and I like how outspoken he’s. Individuals suppose he’s somewhat loopy on Twitter — even I feel he’s somewhat loopy on Twitter — however I recognize it as a result of I do know I’m somewhat loopy on social media.
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“Lots of people don’t like me as a result of, truthfully, I seem to be an a–gap on-line. I might not like me on the web,” she added. “However I’ve made quite a lot of associates as a result of I feel individuals recognize my savage character.”
Guo can also be fearless in her spare time. She has a skydiving license, diving certification and motorbike license and hopes to get her paragliding license, too. And regardless of breaking her jaw on an electrical skateboard, she nonetheless rides. Her twice-daily sweat periods at Barry’s Bootcamp are legendary amongst her 73,000 Twitter and Instagram followers, making her one thing of a strolling billboard for the model.
“I don’t care about trying cute at Barry’s,” she stated. “I simply need to do my two exercises and really feel useless after. I’ve a lot power to burn.”
NORTHWEST MIAMI-DADE, FLA. (WSVN) – Rescue crews took a 15-year-old girl to the hospital after, police said, she became the victim of a shooting in Northwest Miami-Dade.
Miami-Dade Police and Fire Rescue units responded to the scene of the incident at the McDonald’s at Northwest Seventh Avenue and 95th Street, at around 10:15 p.m. on Friday.
Investigators said the teen was wounded in the shoulder while at the fast food restaurant.
Paramedics brought the victim to Jackson Memorial Hospital’s Ryder Trauma Center.
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Detectives are questioning one person. They believe the shooting was accidental.
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French chef Jean-Georges Vongerichten might be known for his culinary empire, but now the famous chef is expanding his reach with his first-ever residential project: Jean-Georges Miami Tropic Residences.
Vongerichten partnered with developers Terra and Lion Development Group to launch the 48-story tower, which will house 329 condos ranging from one to four bedrooms. The building will have 41,000 square feet of amenity spaces, including landscaped gardens, a swimming pool with cabanas, a private rooftop restaurant, and a podcast recording studio. The ground floor of the building will have 27,500 square feet of high-end retail space. New York-based design firm Yabu Pushelberg is responsible for all of the interior spaces and Arquitectonica did the architecture. It’s located in the bustling Design District, known for its ultra-luxe stores, impressive art galleries, public art, and historic architecture.
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“Yabu Pushelberg’s timeless design in the homes and spaces throughout the building is simultaneously serene and vibrant,” says David Martin, CEO of Terra. “The goal was to create a multi-layered experience. From the entrance to the residences, every detail reflects Yabu Pushelberg and Jean-Georges’ joint vision of fine living and entertaining.”
Previously, Vongerichten worked with Yabu Pushelberg to design The Fulton by Jean-Georges in New York, a waterfront restaurant within the city’s Seaport District. Unlike most of Miami’s white box interiors with stark-white walls and floors, Jean-Georges Miami Tropic Residences is infused with plenty of color that reflects the surrounding nature found in Miami. The interiors feature deep green hues, plenty of spectacular greenery. Walking through the entrance of the building is like walking through a garden oasis, with soaring green tiled walls and tropical plant-flanked walkway.
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“We integrated shades of green, natural woods, and stones found in the tropics as a nod to Miami’s lush environment, allowing the surrounding flora and fauna to influence the interiors,” George Yabu, co-founder of Yabu Pushelberg tells Forbes. “We also layered in bold, playful textures throughout the project and added vibrant commissioned art to pay homage to the culture of Miami’s Design District.”
The residences feature warm textures and hues, with warm wood, and rose-colored tiling in a few of the kitchen layouts, and a living room with colorful furniture with yellow and green hues. Each residence is wrapped in floor-to-ceiling windows and sliding glass doors that open to a terrace with incredible views of the city and water. There are two color palettes: dawn, reflecting the delicate hues of early morning light, and dusk, featuring evening-inspired hues. The kitchens in the dawn color palette features Crema Marfil marble countertops and an orange-brown ceramic tile backsplash, warm champagne metal accents, and Italian wood cabinetry with a Beachwood finish. Meanwhile, the dusk kitchens have Green Diabaz stone countertops, dark-blue ceramic tile backsplash, rubbed metal accents, and Italian wood cabinetry in a dark finish. One of Vongerichten’s primary focuses was creating a versatile and ergonomic kitchen. He helped select materials and appliances and wanted the island to be the focal point of each kitchen.
“Our friendship with Jean-Georges naturally evolved from being neighbors in the West Village to creative collaborators,” says Glenn Pushelberg, the other co-founder of Yabu Pushelberg. “Introducing him to this project felt like a perfect fit—not only as a friend but as a visionary whose charisma and wisdom bring energy to every project. Our first collaboration, The Fulton restaurant, embraced the rich history of New York’s Pier 17, and with Miami Tropic, we drew similar inspiration from Miami’s vibrant surroundings, bringing to life the vision of the city we all dream of. Partnering with Jean-Georges to reimagine Miami living felt like a natural next step.”
While this is Vongerichten’s first residential project, it’s not his first foray outside of the restaurant space. This year, he helped open New York’s latest members’ club, Chez Margaux.
A masterplan has been unveiled for a coastal neighborhood in Bahrain which is partly inspired by the U.S. city of Miami.
Bilaj Al Jazayer Beach will span just over two miles of length along Bahrain’s coastline. According to an official release, the mixed-use district will draw inspiration from Miami’s low-rise Art Deco buildings combined with traditional local design.
The walkable locale will feature new homes, hotels, and retail options in addition to public green spaces and “state-of-the-art” amenities.
The city is designed around three main streets, which will be lined with native trees and are intended to encourage walking and cycling across the district.
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The site will be flanked by two large hotels, with smaller, boutique hotels positioned at 500-meter intervals throughout, and residential communities nestled in between.
Neighborhoods will incorporate shaded green courtyards and alleyways that the city’s designers say are inspired by Bahrain’s traditional design principles to create cool outdoor spaces.
At the heart of the development will lie a public surf park, featuring wave-generation technology to simulate the experience of a natural ocean environment on land.
The beach links to a network of piers stretching into the sea, forming protective coves to safeguard the shoreline, and a green park will serve to separate the beachfront from the main road.
“We are creating a green and walkable community on the beach, which offers a range of crafted experiences for residents and visitors,” said Gerard Evenden, head of Studio ar Foster + Partners, the firm behind the designs.
“The permeable development features tree-lined streets, shaded courtyards, and a spectacular public park that directly connects with the waterfront. Needless to say, the west-facing district will also offer some of the best sunset views in Bahrain,” Evenden added.
Newsweek has contacted Foster + Partners for comment via email form.
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Bahrain, officially the Kingdom of Bahrain, is a small island nation in the Persian Gulf, situated between Saudi Arabia and Qatar.
With a population of around 1.5 million, its economy primarily relies on oil, financial services, and tourism.
In neighboring Saudi Arabia, the first project for the country’s Neom megacity recently opened.
Known as Sindalah, the opening of the “luxury island destination” represented a significant milestone for the project, which has become the world’s biggest construction site as part of an effort by Saudi Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman to diversify the nation’s economy.
However, a recent report from human rights organization ALQST warned that companies working with the biggest construction projects in Saudi Arabia, which includes several American firms, run the risk of “political and reputational risks” as the projects face allegations of dangerous conditions and abuse of migrant workers.
The report came amid allegations that thousands of migrant construction workers have died or gone missing since 2017.
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