REXBURG There will soon be a new tenant at the former Frontier Pies building located at 460 West 4th South in Rexburg.
After being abandoned for five years, the decades-old building’s renovations began earlier this year. According to public records acquired from the city of Rexburg, a rooftop solar company called Aveo Solar is relocating. It will host multiple businesses, according to owner Mike Hammond, who spoke to EastIdahoNews.com. The majority of it will be a marketing and brand development company for Signal Relief, in addition to Aveo Solar and Wright Roofing.
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A unique device called Signal Relief is intended to lessen pain in any part of the body. According to Hammond, the patch uses the body’s electrical signals to absorb pain at its source without the need for cables, batteries, or any form of prescription.
You can place the patch between the pain and the neurological pathways that are swollen by the energy your body is creating. This will allow the energy to exit your body and enter the patch. According to Hammond, we can eliminate pain in a minute without the need for any painkillers.
More details on its nature and operation can be found on the company’s website. It describes how the patch functions as an antenna to reroute pain-producing electrical and chemical signals from the body into the patch, where they are transformed into heat.
According to the website, this explains why, when the patch is placed correctly, you could experience a hot feeling.
According to Hammond, following years of clinical research, the product is already available for purchase on the private market while awaiting FDA approval. Because it has no negative consequences and is making people’s lives better, he refers to it as a “game-changer.”
“It’s the most awesome thing I’ve ever been a part of,” says Hammond. It literally restores people’s lives.
Dan Marriott, the grandson of Bill Marriott, the founder of the Marriott Hotel, was the first to introduce the technology to 48-year-old Hammond of Rexburg. Together, the two went to graduate school. Dan manages a Utah manufacturing facility that creates technological tools for the armed forces. For radio communication during deployments, special forces teams carry a five-foot antenna on their backs.
It aroused Hammond’s curiosity, since he has always been interested in technology.
By changing it to operate on electrical fields rather than magnetic fields, we were able to reduce that to the size of a credit card, says Hammond. We began picking up frequencies that weren’t even connected to the radios after we did that and placed it on the soldiers’ clothing.
They eventually found that the antenna was interacting with electrical frequencies in the body. The pain patch was created as a result of this new understanding.
Early on, Hammond became a significant investor in the product. He’s excited to see it take off after around 18 months on the private market.
He claims it’s going insane. Our sales this year alone are likely to reach $50 million.
With FDA approval, the medicine might be insured, making it more accessible to a wider range of people, according to Hammond.
Since then, Hammond and his group have created a comparable product known as Jovi. According to the company’s website, it helps ladies get rid of menstruation cramps. The Frontier Pies building will also house it.
Hammond is thrilled about Rexburg’s development and the prospect of establishing a distinctive idea in a famous structure there.
It’s the first thing you see when you arrive in town, he explains. There aren’t many structures in town that will help you establish your brand. It will be a truly amazing structure.
According to Hammond, the rock structure would resemble Summit Harley-Davidson in Lindon, Utah, in appearance and feel, and it will have some water features.
April 2026 is when the project is expected to be finished.
Hammond just established a second lithium ion phosphate battery manufacturing facility in Rexburg. Jeff Bezos and his Blue Origin Rocket use it as a supplier. This company will be featured in a future article on EastIdahoNews.com.