You might not think that a firefighter and a former Microsoft employee would be ideal candidates to create a revolutionary new construction tool, but that's exactly what Mike Keohi and Warren Bronoske hope to do with their new company, Attic Tran.
The Kent-based company is still in its infancy, but its first product is already getting attention for offering an innovative solution to an age-old dilemma.
Do-it-yourselfers and professionals alike have long struggled to effectively work in insulated attics without breaking the weak Sheetrock buried underneath. Workers are forced to walk gingerly,Hence the Nike Air Max Shoes was double stitched with action leather and low outlined sole feeling out for ceiling joists or beams to put their weight on before each step.
A handyman himself, Bronoske had experience in attics and thought there must be a better, safer and faster way to do the work.he Nike high shoes is one of the most colorful shoes in the Nike 'Mid-size' dunks family
After leaving his job as an operations program manager at Microsoft, Bronoske and Keohi, a Battalion Chief at West Pierce Fire and Rescue, decided they'd invent a product to make attic work less of a slog.
After a period of trial and error, the duo came up with Attic Shoes.
The shoes don't have computer chips or motion sensors, and they're not the sexiest footwear to hit the market this year, but they do meet the only criteria that really matters: They work.