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Camino is a developer of an artificial intelligence-powered, power-assisted walking device designed to modernize traditional mobility aids, operating from an undisclosed headquarters location. The company integrates electric motors, advanced sensors, computer vision, and robotic controls into its hardware to assist individuals experiencing severe mobility challenges, such as those associated with Parkinson's disease or frequent falls. The integrated system actively monitors user gait and enables remote tracking, providing quantitative biomechanical data directly to physicians and physical therapists for proactive medical care. Following five years of dedicated research and clinical testing, the enterprise plans to officially launch its commercial product in 2025. The firm has gained industry recognition through its participation as a featured startup within the AgeTech Collaborative network. Camino was established in an undisclosed year by chief executive officer Duncan Orrell-Jones and Idealab founder Bill Gross.
Camino has raised $6.0M across 2 funding rounds.
Camino has raised $6.0M in total across 2 funding rounds.
Camino Technologies is a Bay Area-based technology company specializing in user-friendly permitting and licensing software for small- and medium-sized government agencies in North America.[1][2][4][5] Launched in 2015, it offers products like an application portal (now Clariti Launch), business and cannabis licensing tools, virtual inspections, and the Clariti Guide (formerly Camino Development Guide) to automate workflows, streamline inspections, and reduce administrative burdens.[1][2][4][5] The software serves local governments by solving inefficiencies in building permits, planning, business licensing, events, and more, enabling tailored applications, quick workflow launches, and integration with existing systems—demonstrated by client wins like a 70% drop in permit counter visits for Santa Clarita, CA, and $93,766 in staff savings for Syracuse, NY.[5] Acquired by Clariti in a recent deal (terms undisclosed), the combined entity now serves over 150 million people, blending Camino's intuitive platform for smaller governments with Clariti's enterprise solutions.[1][2]
Camino raised at least $8.9 million before the acquisition, reflecting strong growth momentum in govtech permitting amid rising demands for digital government services.[1][4]
Camino Technologies was founded in 2015 in San Mateo, California, targeting inefficiencies in government permitting processes.[1][4] Key leadership includes CEO Mike Rosengarten, who highlighted the acquisition as a pivotal step for enhanced innovation and funding.[1][2] Early traction came from rapid deployments—e.g., the City of Alameda went live in one month—and awards like the 2022 ICC “Innovation in Code Administration” for Pleasant Hill, CA's use of its Development Guide.[5] The idea emerged to create next-generation, easy-to-use tools for small- and mid-sized governments, evolving from basic portals to comprehensive automation for licensing, inspections, and applicant guidance.[1][2][5] The acquisition by Vancouver-based Clariti (founded 2008) marks a new chapter, with both brands retained and expanded to cover governments of all sizes.[2]
Camino rides the govtech wave of digital transformation, addressing heightened pressures on government staff for faster, citizen-friendly services amid staffing shortages and rising permit volumes.[2] Timing aligns with post-pandemic demands for remote/virtual tools like inspections, plus North America's push for efficient local governance serving 150M+ people post-merger.[1][2] Market forces favoring it include legacy system replacements and the need for scalable SaaS in permitting/licensing, where Camino complements enterprise players like Clariti to dominate small/medium segments.[1][2] It influences the ecosystem by setting benchmarks for user experience—e.g., ICC awards—and enabling agencies to focus on services over admin, fostering broader adoption of modern permitting tech.[5]
With Clariti's resources, Camino will accelerate product enhancements, targeting universal coverage for governments while retaining its niche agility for smaller users.[2] Trends like AI-driven automation and web3-adjacent efficiencies (unrelated blockchain "Camino Network" aside) will shape its path, amplifying impact in a $10B+ govtech market.[1][2] Expect expanded features, more acquisitions, and dominance in permitting—evolving from a promising startup to an entrenched leader serving millions, as Rosengarten and Clariti CEOs envision decades of innovation.[1][2] This positions it at the forefront of streamlined governance, tying back to its core mission of exceptional experiences for agencies and citizens.[2][5]
Camino has raised $6.0M in total across 2 funding rounds.
Camino's investors include Baseline Ventures, Blackhorn Ventures, BrightCap Ventures, Brighton Park Capital, Clocktower Technology Ventures, Deciens Capital, Fathom Capital, Govtech Fund, Jacob Conger, H/L Ventures, Jetstream, S28 Capital.
Camino has raised $6.0M across 2 funding rounds. Most recently, it raised $2.0M Seed in December 2018.