Two undergraduates — with a mobile app to take the pain out of parking for drivers and lot managers — claimed the $10,000 first prize in the 18th annual at the University of California, Davis, tonight (May 24). Their venture, , uses smart data and advanced analytics to provide drivers and lot managers with real-time parking information.
“Our vision is simple: to solve parking problems and to make smart cities and university and corporate campuses a reality,” said Japa CEO Mathew Magno of Rancho Cucamonga, California, a ϲϿ Davis senior majoring in computer science. The other team member is Charles Chen of Bellevue, Washington, who is a ϲϿ Davis senior in computer science engineering.
In the main Big Bang! event, five finalists from among 62 entries presented their ventures (one by video). They were judged based on their integrated strategy, steps toward implementation and market opportunity. Prizes for Big Bang!, including its pitch and poster competitions, totaled $112,000.
Davis-based won the $5,000 second prize for its “digital medicines.”
With a total of $17,500 in prize money, ϲϿ Davis postdoctoral scholar Denise Bronner had the highest winnings of the night for of Sacramento, which makes all-natural snacks from the spent grain of microbreweries. She won the $2,500 People’s Choice Award, voted by the audience at the ceremony; the $12,000 Food and Agricultural Sector Award; and the $3,000 Food, Ag and Health Innovation Award.
Competition helps grow ventures
Big Bang!, organized by the at the university’s , has been helping entrepreneurs start or grow business ventures for almost two decades through the competition itself as well as the workshops and mentoring it offers. It is open to the public.
Magno, who co-founded the accelerator for entrepreneurs on campus, said participating in Big Bang! helped advance Japa and extend its network of entrepreneurs in the Davis community.
The startup will use the prize money to hire additional programmers. “Japa will continue to operate paid trials in various cities, universities and hospitals,” Magno said. “We plan to expand to airports, amusement parks and sports arenas — which are all in desperate need of our service.”
Japa also received a $2,500 microgrant in this afternoon's Little Bang! Pitch and Poster Competition and a $1,000 microgrant through participation in the January round of Little Bang!.
Second-place winner
Tony Simon, associate director of behavioral sciences at the ϲϿ Davis MIND Institute and professor of psychiatry and behavioral sciences at the ϲϿ Davis School of Medicine, is the CEO and chief science officer for second-place winner Cognivive.
He said the startup’s novel treatments “will completely change how brain-injury patients recover function, how older Americans experience reduced cognitive decline and risk of dangerous falls, and how learning-disabled children can succeed in their educational and vocational journey.”
The prize money will help Cognivive build and test new, clinically focused prototype treatments. “In a year we hope to have a full-time team of five to 10 people and real treatments undergoing testing with patients and users in a range of environments,” Simon said.
An additional $43,500 in cash was awarded for Big Bang! and an additional $13,500 in prizes for its pitch and poster competitions this afternoon. An additional $19,000 had been awarded in the December and January rounds of Little Bang!.
Other winners in the main Big Bang! competition include:
- of San Luis Obispo, California
- of the Los Angeles area
- Chica Culture of the San Diego area
- of Merced, California
- of Davis
Media Resources
Marianne Skoczek, ϲϿ Davis Institute for Innovation and Entrepreneurship, cell 415-425-0878, mskoczek@ucdavis.edu
Julia Ann Easley, News and Media Relations, 530-752-8248, jaeasley@ucdavis.edu