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At Home
with Helen Greiner:
Helen Greiner can build
you a robot, but don't ask her to cook you dinner.
The cofounder and chairwoman of iRobot Corp. of Burlington, which makes
the Roomba vacuum cleaner and other robotic devices, makes only tea and
coffee in her kitchen, beautifully appointed with Corian and chrome
design and modern appliances. The two meals a day she fits into her
schedule are eaten outside, a fact underscored by her refrigerator,
freezer, and pantry, all nearly bare.
Greiner, 37, would rather
be boating, particularly kayaking; it's why she selected this house on
Lake Cochituate.
The split-level home on
one-third of an acre is of moderate size -- three compact bedrooms, an
open dining/living area, and a screened porch. Of course, that doesn't
include Lake Cochituate: ''I consider the whole lake my land," she says,
playfully.
She keeps two kayaks and a
small Sunfish sailboat on her private dock, and plans to own a ski boat
one day.
''If you live near fun you
have more of it," she says. ''I wouldn't go kayaking if I had to put it
on my car and go somewhere."
Born in London, Greiner
moved to New York with her family when she was 5. She moved to Boston to
attend MIT, where she earned a bachelor's degree in mechanical
engineering and a master's degree in computer science. In 2003, she was
selected as one of the country's top 10 innovators by Fortune magazine.
She travels frequently for
work and as a member of the World Economic Forum's Young Global Leaders.
A photo of herself with other Forum ''Power Chicks" rests on a wall unit
beside her newest toy, a Bose iPod SoundDock, and her Russian matryoshka
doll collection. She also displays favorite items from her year as an
exchange student in Japan and a collection of wood-carved animals from
Sri Lanka, which now ''remind me not only of a wonderful trip but also
the sadness" of the damage wrought by the tsunami, she says.
Her taste in furniture is
sleek ''modern lines"; she says she searched for just the right couches
before finally finding them at Adesso, ''that foofy European place in
Boston." She selected end tables and a dining room set from Workbench
and Crate and Barrel. ''It doesn't matter where it comes from as long as
I like it." Her favorite seat is an oversized beanbag, soon to relocate
to the basement after her brother, a builder to the stars on Long
Island, fulfills his promise to build a home theater for her.
Greiner spends endless
hours in a second-floor study that, these days, looks out at
snow-covered trees and the lake. But it's the Internet game Second Life,
not the view, that compels her. It's ''a whole artificial world; a
really neat game they let you program," she says, then pauses and adds,
as though rationalizing her guilty pleasure, ''The programming paradigm
is somewhat similar to the behaviors on the robots."
Books line the study
walls, with titles from business to biology to military doctrines to
contemporary novels to ''the more whimsical, my 'Little House on the
Prairie' books." She has read them all.
This is the first house
Greiner has owned. Built in the 1950s and renovated by the former
occupants, all it required when she moved in two years ago were Internet
cables and the upgraded basement.
Just off the lower level
is a small storeroom brimming with new golf clubs and snowboarding
equipment. ''If there's fun going on, I don't want to stay behind," she
says. She's taking up golf for conference downtime and is an avid
snowboarder. Alongside her sporting equipment is a well-stocked
workbench.
She's big on DeWalt tools,
admitting she originally stocked up to fix the ''five more things" the
house required. ''My friends laughed, saying, 'Helen, you don't know
what it's like to own a house."
Indeed, keeping up with
her home has been continuous, but at least she never has to vacuum: The
robotic floor vac her company created shimmies its way around the shiny
hardwood floors, dodging the furnishings and dining well on any dirt
left unnoticed.
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