Solar-powered gargoyle guardians that monitor urban tree health 24/7—turning ugly utility infrastructure into breathtaking public art.
Each gargoyle is a unique piece of art designed by local artists, housing periscope cameras and environmental sensors that blend seamlessly into the urban landscape.
Elegant, jewelry-like nodes that hang from tree branches—measuring moisture, light levels, and disease markers while looking like wind chimes.
Completely self-sufficient with integrated solar panels. Each guardian operates autonomously, requiring zero external power or maintenance.
Periscope cameras track branch growth, leaf density, and early signs of disease—alerting city arborists before visible damage occurs.
Machine learning algorithms identify Dutch Elm disease, oak wilt, and other threats weeks before human detection—saving millions in replacement costs.
City officials get instant 3D health visualizations, predictive maintenance alerts, and ROI metrics on their mobile devices.
A city official points their phone at a centuries-old oak tree and instantly sees a 3D health visualization on their screen—while the gargoyle at its base, designed by a local artist, slowly moves its periscope eye to track new branch growth. Passersby think it's just beautiful art, but it just saved the city $12,000 by detecting early Dutch Elm disease.
Per-unit software subscription after year 1
Average city tree replacement cost: $15,000 | Typical ROI: Under 4 years