Hartford Business Journal

HBJ011226UF

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HARTFORDBUSINESS.COM | JANUARY 12, 2026 9 www.borghesibuilding.com 2155 East Main Street, Torrington, CT 06790 860.482.7613 Check out our new website! © 2011 BlueScope Buildings North America, Inc. All rights reserved. Butler Manufacturing ™ is a division of BlueScope Buildings North America, Inc. Building Ideas That Work... Building Ideas That Work... With an aractive design, we will present to your clients a comfortable, relaxing environment. For more than 80 years, Borghesi Building & Engineering Co., Inc. has provided quality and reliability with design and energy efficient construction. PROJECT SPOTLIGHT: TRINITY HEALTH - WATERTOWN Eric Taylor, X9's co-founder and vice president of research and development, says that while his biotech firm is part of a West Coast incubator, it has no plans to move from Wallingford. HBJ Photo | David Krechevsky device in Eastern Europe in November. Taylor said the initial clearance allows X9 to advance its ultrasound and artificial-intelligence capa- bilities independently of the full needle-insertion function. DaVita officials were unavailable for comment, but the company's chief transformation officer, Misha Palecek, said in a recent interview with medical technology publication MedTech Dive that DaVita hopes X9's device can have uses beyond dialysis patients. "DaVita's excited about it because there's use cases, hopefully, a lot further beyond DaVita, which are really going to have an impact on the Amer- ican healthcare system," Palecek said. The next phase for X9, Taylor said, involves refining the device's design to prepare it for commercialization and submission to the FDA for broader approval. That work will also include a human trial involving full needle insertion. Committed to CT In addition to its work with DaVita, X9 collaborates with a vascular surgeon in North Haven and clini- cians around the country, Taylor said. "We have some really good rela- tionships with clinicians … that help us answer and inform decisions that we have to make," he said. DaVita has also provided access to its dialysis clinics, which Taylor said has been critical to under- standing the needs of both patients and providers. "It's very hard to design a product without really having access to the clinical environment," Taylor said. Taylor, who lives in West Hartford, said X9 plans to remain headquar- tered in Connecticut, despite its ties to ExploraMed, which is based in the San Francisco Bay Area. "When I got involved with the incubator, they had reached out and actually tried to get me to move out to the West Coast," he said. "But I grew up in Connecticut, and my anchor's here, my kids. So I pitched the opportunity to do it here." Taylor said Connecticut offers a deep pool of electrical and mechan- ical engineering talent, and that the core of X9's team is based in the state. "We are not planning on moving anywhere," he said.

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