Jewish Action Summer 2013

Page 75

Schmutter says he developed the idea for Portal Logics while working in downtown Manhattan immediately after the terrorist attacks on 9/11. (His friend was a chief engineer for one of the World Trade Center buildings.) Schmutter spent six months after the event volunteering in hospitals and helping first-responders. What horrified him most was knowing that on 9/11, instead of using advanced technology to assess the situation, first-responders did so themselves, putting their lives in danger. One amazing feature of Schmutter’s high-tech doors is that during a fire or other emergency, the doors convey information about possible safety concerns in the area. “I was able to formulate a lot of different ideas after 9/11,” he says. “I saw an opportunity to use doors to provide information and that became my mission.” While developing the prototype that became Portal Logics in 2003, he was contacted by Woodmere Health and Rehabilitation Center in New York to build automatic doors for the institution. As the facility serves many Orthodox clients, it requested that Schmutter include a function enabling the automatic doors to be used on Shabbat and Jewish holidays. Schmutter created a “Shabbat mode” for the door and installed a five-year calendar into its hardware, which was included in the final design of Portal Logics. “Portal Logics has the ability to deal with an infinite number of scenarios and is prepared for multiple simultaneous conflicts,” Schmutter explained. Schmutter, who isn’t Orthodox but attends a Chabad shul, approached the OU with his product. “The OU has very high standards,” says Rabbi Gersten. “Usually, when we explain to a company what we require,

OU Posek Rabbi Yisroel Belsky with Mr. Schmutter.

Bruce Schmutter, creator of an automatic door with a “Shabbat mode.” Photo: Claudio Papapietro

they pass on it. To Bruce’s credit, he wanted the highest standards and wasn’t interested in cutting corners in halachah.” OU Posek Rabbi Yisroel Belsky visited Schmutter’s workshop in the Dumbo section of Brooklyn and granted the certification. Portal Logics isn’t the only non-food item the OU has certified. The OU certifies shaimos services, a pair of tzitzit as well as a warming cabinet used to heat food on Shabbat. But working on Portal Logics was one of the most intense experiences Rabbi Steinberg says he has had in his seventeen years working at the OU. “Growing up, I had a neighbor who was a Talmudic scholar and we would kibbitz. Arguing and understanding the Talmud, whether or not I follow it per say, has always been an interest of mine,” Schmutter says. “And I take the sanctity of what I’m providing to the umpteenth degree—be it halachah or fire code. I wanted the official seal . . . I wanted to get approval from the authority.” g

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Summer 5773/2013 JEWISH ACTION 75


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