{"slug": "how-to-launch-an-ai-meeting-app-in-san-francisco-rent-a-pirate-and-a-painted", "title": "How to launch an AI meeting app in San Francisco? Rent a pirate and a Painted Lady.", "summary": "AI startup Ahoy launched its agentic meeting scheduler by renting San Francisco's Pink Painted Lady for a pirate-themed party, offering free public access to the historic landmark. The event, funded by investor TQ Ventures, aimed to build community and differentiate the company amid criticism that AI firms are plundering the city's real estate.", "body_md": "At 8 a.m. on Wednesday morning, one of the only signs that something was happening at the “Pink Painted Lady,” one of the seven famous private residences on Alamo Square’s “Postcard Row,” was the actor in a pirate costume assuming a drunken stance by the front steps.\n\nAt the top of the stairs, an usher in a black suit checked Partiful reservations, then lifted the velvet rope. Behind it: a launch party for [Ahoy](https://ahoy.ai/), an AI startup celebrating the rollout of its agentic meeting scheduler and business agent by transforming the ground floor of the home into a swashbuckling fantasia.\n\n“Anytime you see a company launch, you spend $60,000 on a launch video,” said Jana Iris, a key investor in* *Ahoy with TQ Ventures. “Instead we thought: let’s do something for the community.”\n\nFor an industry critics fear has come to [plunder](https://missionlocal.org/2025/09/sf-evictions-rents-rising-ai-boom/) San Francisco’s real estate, the company’s pirate-themed shindig — overtaking one of the Painted Ladies — may have been a smidge too on-the-nose.\n\nOn the other hand, the event was free, [open-invite](https://partiful.com/e/SlltL5YlooeQMOUWdFQT?ac=true&rsvped=true), and offered a rare chance to see inside the otherwise restrictive historic landmark.\n\nLeah Culver, a former senior engineer at Twitter and now Airbnb, bought the Pink Lady in 2020 for $3.55 million, well above the asking price. In 2022, Culver announced she was putting the home back up for sale. The three-story house had been neglected for decades before Culver bought it, and the extent of the work that needed to be done [was overwhelming](https://www.realtor.com/news/unique-homes/san-francisco-pink-painted-lady-for-sale/).\n\nNow, Culver says, it’s no longer on the market as she decides on long-term plans. “In the meantime, we’re going to continue to explore opportunities for public access,” Culver told *Mission Local. “*Not just tech folks hoping to do events.”\n\nIris, a good friend of Culver’s, persuaded her to let Ahoy turn the open rooms into a smuggler’s cove, decking its storied walls with buccaneer mannequins, a skeleton in a brig, and other seafaring frills.\n\nDozens of people attended at different parts of the day. Conversation ranged from networking requests to musings about their employers (several guests refused to share who they worked for).\n\n“I’ve been here for 20 years through a few different booms and busts,” Iris said, her months-old puppy Dolores at her feet. “San Francisco has always been a Gold Rush, transient city. There are always going to be people who come to make their money and leave. And then there are people like us: I plan to be in S.F. for the rest of my life, and I want to create events like this, fostering appreciation for the city’s art and music and culture, forever.”\n\nFor Ahoy’s co-founders Monique Eisenach and Kevin Bluett, the party was a way to differentiate themselves as “not like any other startup.” The two previously spent a combined 17 years at customer service software company HubSpot, they said, and wanted to get people’s attention in a way that felt community-oriented.\n\n“It’s important to preserve — and continue to celebrate — our history,” Eisenach said. “But also,” she added, “build new things.”\n\nPerhaps unintentionally, they tapped into an understanding shared by some city preservationists.\n\n“Historic buildings that survive are those that get used and are active,” said Woody LaBounty, president and CEO of [SF Heritage](https://www.sfheritage.org/), a nonprofit dedicated to preserving the city’s historic character. “And getting more people inside to appreciate them is a good thing.”\n\nAt this, the launch succeeded. Judith Hengeveld, a website designer, and her husband Nick, a developer at GitHub, trekked from San Carlos simply to see the house.\n\n“I don’t exactly know what Ahoy does,” Judith said. “But my guess is it has something to do with AI.”", "url": "https://wpnews.pro/news/how-to-launch-an-ai-meeting-app-in-san-francisco-rent-a-pirate-and-a-painted", "canonical_source": "https://missionlocal.org/2026/07/ai-startup-san-francisco-pirate-painted-lady/", "published_at": "2026-07-09 00:38:03+00:00", "updated_at": "2026-07-09 00:54:38.370250+00:00", "lang": "en", "topics": ["ai-startups", "ai-products", "ai-agents"], "entities": ["Ahoy", "Jana Iris", "TQ Ventures", "Leah Culver", "Monique Eisenach", "Kevin Bluett", "HubSpot", "SF Heritage"], "alternates": {"html": "https://wpnews.pro/news/how-to-launch-an-ai-meeting-app-in-san-francisco-rent-a-pirate-and-a-painted", "markdown": "https://wpnews.pro/news/how-to-launch-an-ai-meeting-app-in-san-francisco-rent-a-pirate-and-a-painted.md", "text": "https://wpnews.pro/news/how-to-launch-an-ai-meeting-app-in-san-francisco-rent-a-pirate-and-a-painted.txt", "jsonld": "https://wpnews.pro/news/how-to-launch-an-ai-meeting-app-in-san-francisco-rent-a-pirate-and-a-painted.jsonld"}}