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El Husky Siberiano es el animal de trabajo más capaz jamás domesticado. También es la inspiración detrás de todo lo que construimos.


Nome, Alaska — February 1925

Los perros que salvaron una ciudad

In January 1925, a diphtheria outbreak threatened to kill hundreds of children in Nome, a remote mining town on the western coast of Alaska. The nearest antitoxin serum was in Anchorage — nearly 1,100 kilometres away. The port was frozen. The only aircraft capable of the flight was grounded. The railroad ended 800 kilometres short.

Solo había una opción. Enviaron a los perros.

Twenty mushers and around 150 sled dogs relayed the serum across the Alaskan interior in a continuous run. Temperatures plunged to −52 °C. Blizzard winds exceeded 100 kilometres per hour. One musher, Leonhard Seppala, travelled over 420 kilometres in total with his team — including a lead dog named Togo, who ran the longest and most dangerous leg of the entire relay: 42 miles across the treacherous Norton Sound sea ice. The ice broke apart within hours of their crossing.

“The wind was blowing so hard the snow was like needles in your face. But the dogs kept going.”

The final leg into Nome was run by Gunnar Kaasen and his lead dog Balto. They arrived at 5:30 in the morning on February 2nd, 1925, completing a 1,085-kilometre relay in just five and a half days. The children lived.

Today, the Iditarod Trail Sled Dog Race retraces that same route every year — 1,600 kilometres across Alaska, in the dead of winter — as a direct tribute to the serum run and to the animals that made it possible. The trail itself follows the old Iditarod mail route, the supply lines that connected the most isolated communities in North America long before roads or aircraft.


−50°
Celsius — temperatura de operación de un equipo de Huskies en trabajo
1,688
Kilómetros — longitud del Iditarod Trail
Días para entregar el suero de Nome en 1.085 km de Alaska helado
~2kg
Ingesta diaria de alimentos de un perro de trineo que recorre 150 km por día

El animal

Construido para la frontera

The Siberian Husky is not the fastest dog, nor the strongest. What makes it extraordinary is the combination: endurance, efficiency, and the ability to operate at full speed in conditions that shut everything else down.

When it is −40 °C and the diesel machines have frozen solid, when the roads have disappeared and the aircraft are grounded, the Husky team is still moving. Not trudging. Moving. At pace. With purpose.

An Iditarod sled dog burns up to 12,000 calories a day while covering 160 kilometres at racing pace in extreme cold — yet does so with a metabolic efficiency that exercise physiologists have studied for decades and still cannot fully explain. No other mammal sustains this level of output, for this long, at this efficiency. The working mechanism appears to involve real-time metabolic reprogramming mid-race — something unique in the animal kingdom.

They thrive in the most hostile environments on earth. They ask for very little. And they will take you exactly where you need to go.


Por qué este nombre

HuskyBIM

Los modelos BIM no son simples. Son grandes, complejos y llenos de partes móviles. Las herramientas disponibles para arquitectos e ingenieros han sido potentes pero lentas — requieren configuración manual, exportaciones de archivos, scripts y conocimientos especializados solo para hacer preguntas básicas sobre su propio modelo.

Construimos HuskyBIM porque creemos que eso debe cambiar. Claude es extraordinariamente capaz. Revit es extraordinariamente capaz. La brecha entre ellos era solo un conector.

Lo nombramos en honor al Husky porque eso es lo que queremos que HuskyBIM sea para usted: lo que le lleva allí cuando todo lo demás está congelado. Rápido, eficiente, construido para las condiciones más duras. Sin complicaciones. Sin drama. Solo avanzando.

El Husky no necesita mucho. Solo un camino claro y un lugar al que ir.


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