
Framed in Family: Galiano Tiramani on the Boxabl Vision
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How do you solve America's housing crisis? For Galiano Tiramani, co-founder of Boxable, the answer lies in completely reimagining how homes are built, shipped, and installed.
The journey from Bitcoin trader to housing revolutionary isn't an obvious career path, but Tiramani's entrepreneurial instincts led him to partner with his engineer father to develop a groundbreaking concept: houses manufactured on assembly lines that fold up for shipping, then expand on-site for quick installation. Their flagship product, the Casita, offers 360 square feet of modern living space for just $60,000, while their newest innovation—the Baby Box—provides essential housing for an astonishing $20,000.
What makes this conversation particularly fascinating is Tiramani's candid discussion of the regulatory obstacles that have historically prevented housing innovation. From city councilmen personally blocking affordable housing projects to the federal government holding vast empty lands surrounding Las Vegas hostage, the artificial barriers to solving the housing crisis become painfully clear. Yet Boxable persists, navigating state-by-state approvals and building a nationwide dealer network.
The manufacturing insights alone are worth your time—Tiramani explains how applying automotive production methods to housing creates precision, quality control, and economies of scale impossible with traditional construction. The Baby Box's ingenious design as a permanent RV circumvents countless regulations, connecting to utilities with nothing more complicated than a garden hose and extension cord.
With 170,000 people on their waitlist and factories operating in North Las Vegas, Boxable represents one of the most promising solutions to America's housing challenges. Whether you're a potential homebuyer, investor, or simply concerned about housing affordability, this episode offers a compelling vision of how innovation might finally break through in this essential industry.
Listen now to discover how persistence and creative problem-solving could transform housing accessibility for millions of Americans, and consider: could factory-built housing be the future we've been waiting for?