A Quiet Builder in Wynwood Makes a Case for AI That Ships.
While a thousand pilots stall in committee, Georg Chimion — an automation specialist working out of South Florida — has a simpler promise: eight products live, zero abandoned.
For years, enterprise software promised intelligence and delivered spreadsheets. The quiet revolution happening in Miami's Wynwood district promises something more specific: intelligence that holds up under payroll, under audit, under the kind of Tuesday afternoon where a condo association needs to collect dues and a finance team needs to reconcile ten thousand transactions before the market opens.
Georg Chimion, an automation specialist currently working with the global consultancy PwC, has built eight such products. They run. They have users. None of them — and this is the line his clients keep returning to — has been quietly sunset after the demo.
"A pilot is a design choice. So is production. I pick production."
His work spans condominium operations, personal finance, event booking, and what he calls "the boring infrastructure AI should have fixed five years ago." A platform named Vestia handles six distinct modules for South Florida property associations — maintenance triage, compliance filings, delinquency collections. Ask Penny, a Claude-powered copilot, reads a family's bank transactions and makes a budget that actually responds when the family overspends.
The scope is broad enough to raise eyebrows. Asked how a single operator ships this much, Mr. Chimion is direct: "I pick problems I'm going to still be annoyed by in six months. That filters the list."
He does not write research papers. He does not appear on panels. He does appear, with some regularity, in the commits of repositories quietly running payroll, rent collection, and reconciliation for clients who would prefer not to be named in this publication.
For an industry that spent 2024 and 2025 learning what "pilot fatigue" meant, the proposition is refreshingly small: call him, describe the bottleneck, get something that works by next quarter.