After focusing on asteroid assets and clean power, engineers start fresh with a venture called Special Teams

Nine years ago, Clara Sekowski was part of the engineering team at Planetary Resources, a Seattle-area startup that planned to mine precious metals on asteroids. Six years ago, she joined other veterans from Planetary Resources at First Mode, another trailblazing startup that focused on clean energy for industrial applications. Now sheβs the CEO of Special Teams, a consulting firm founded with fellow engineers from First Mode.
βThird timeβs the charm, right?β she says.
Both of those earlier startups attracted high-profile backers for their ambitious plans, only to face setbacks as reality set in. Special Teams is starting smaller, but itβs gaining traction: The bootstrapped venture and its team of just over 10 engineers recently moved into a 7,400-square-foot office and workshop facility in Seattleβs SoDo neighborhood β and itβs already exceeding its revenue target.
βIn our first year, weβre almost at $2 million, which is above and beyond a goal we had set for Year One,β she told GeekWire.
The Special Teams roster includes engineers with experience in aerospace, software development, and even the gaming industry.
βWe use systems engineering to bridge the gap between innovation on paper and operational deployment,β Sekowski said. βWe design and build prototypes and custom simulations to prove that concepts can work in real-world conditions.β
Special Teamsβ to-do list includes helping BHP lay the groundwork for deep-mining automation; working on a confidential nuclear project; and advising Scuderia Cameron Glickenhaus, a high-performance car company, on its plan to create a hydrogen-powered pickup truck.
βI have worked for decades with top engineering and design companies around the world β¦ on highly complex and challenging projects,β Jesse Glickenhaus, Scuderia Cameron Glickenhausβ CEO, said in an emailed statement. βSpecTeams is by far the most incredible team I have worked with when doing something new and technologically challenging needs to be paired with significant safety and environmental concerns.β
Special Teamsβ tangled origins
Sekowski and her teammates have had to deal with their share of technological challenges over the past decade. Redmond, Wash.-based Planetary Resources initially planned to build a fleet of spacecraft to seek out and mine asteroids, and then widened its focus to include Earth observation as well. But funding eventually ran out, and by the end of 2018, Planetary Resources was history.
Some of the engineers who left Planetary Resources started up First Mode. Initially, the engineering consulting firm played a supporting role in a variety of space projects, including NASAβs Artemis moon program and the Perseverance rover mission on Mars.
As time went on, First Mode tightened its focus to concentrate on clean-tech power systems. It established a proving ground for those systems at a former coal mine in Centralia, Wash. Then, in 2023, the Anglo American mining conglomerate took a majority interest in First Mode and accelerated its drive to develop hydrogen-fueled and hybrid powertrains for heavy trucks.
Last year, First Mode opened a 40,000-square-foot factory in the SoDo district β but the company also had to trim back its workforce to adjust to the market demand for clean tech. Months after the factory opened, Anglo American cut off funding for First Mode, setting the stage for a bankruptcy filing and an asset acquisition deal with Cummins, an Indiana-based power solutions company.

Molly Puga, First Modeβs general manager, said the company is continuing to pursue its decarbonization mission as part of the Cummins Power Systems global network.
βSince theΒ acquisition of First Mode, Cummins has been hard at work bringing hybrid solutions for mining toΒ reality,β Puga said in an emailed statement. βWe have announced aΒ partnership with KomatsuΒ to scale our hybrid solution, received aΒ grant from TransAltaΒ to support operations at our proving grounds in Centralia, and have shipped product to South America to be commissioned at a mine in the next several months. First Mode continues to employ about 70 employees globally, with the majority of them based in Seattle.β
Special Teams has also been hard at work at its new SoDo facility.
βWe are excited to be in the space that we have. Itβs a great mix of space where we can build hardware and have a forklift and move around and make noise, and office space where we can get the rest of our work done,β Sekowski said. βSoDo is a great spot for that, because this is really the only area where you can have hybrid spaces. We are going to be here until our hardware doesnβt fit in the building anymore.β
Startups sparked, lessons learned
Special Teams isnβt the only startup founded by First Mode alumni: Last year, former CEO Chris Voorhees and former chief operating officer Rhae Adams established a think tank called Sol Zero Group to support new engineering ventures β including Special Teams.
Civic Forge, which advises businesses on government affairs and public policy strategies, is another venture in Sol Zeroβs family of companies. It was founded last year by Conor Duggan, First Modeβs former director of government affairs; and Adam Day, who previously served as First Modeβs senior government affairs manager.
This year, Duggan took on a new role at a clean-tech startup called Vaulted Deep, and Day took charge as Civic Forgeβs CEO.
βCivicΒ ForgeΒ works alongside Special Teams when a challenge has both policy and technical dimensions,β Day told GeekWire via email. βTogether, we pair engineering with policy, which helps clients de-risk designs, win public support and hit milestones faster. Our combined goal is simple: Help organizations move faster across dimensions so they can focus on building.β

Sekowski said that she gets βso much joyβ from seeing former colleagues do well, at First Mode and at new ventures. βI think thatβs part of the legacy,β she said. βItβs not just Special Teams, but itβs all of us, taking what we learned there and putting it into the next things that we do.β
Sheβs grateful for the experience she gained at First Mode. βSome of the things I learned at First Mode are important to us here as well,β she said. βDoing work in a broad domain, not just in space, but across energy and other industries, helps us do better work. And so thatβs something that weβll continue.β
Sekowski is even grateful for the setbacks she and her teammates encountered along the way. βI learned so much through the process of being a part of Planetary Resources, and then what was a strong correction to some of the funding issues there with First Mode, and now getting to put some of those lessons together to build this team,β she said. βYou donβt get a lot of chances to grow in that way. β¦ Weβve got the battle scars. We know where we want to go, what we donβt want to do, and how to get there.β