After a few years, you may not have to move bricks anymore.
On February 15, Monumental, a construction robot startup, announced on its official website that it had completed a new round of financing of US$25 million, led by Plural and Hummingbird, with participation from Northzone, Foundamental, NP-Hard Ventures, Material Ventures and well-known angel investors.
It is reported that the funds will be used to expand the number of robots that can be deployed across Europe, strengthen its world-class team of hardware and software engineers, and increase the use scenarios and construction tasks of robots.
Founded in 2021, Monumental produces AGVs that can move freely on the rugged terrain of construction sites. It was founded by Salar al Khafaji (CEO) and Sebastiaan Visser (CTO). Their vision is to use robots to make up for the lack of bricklayers, thereby alleviating the current housing shortage caused by inefficient house construction.
Housing shortage, Europe becomes the main battlefield for companies
According to statistics, more than 57% of European countries are facing a shortage of construction workers. Due to the shortage of affordable housing, about 82 million Europeans will face the risk of homelessness.
Take the UK as an example. It is estimated that 300,000 houses will need to be built by 2025. However, based on the existing labor situation, there will be a shortage of 70,000 bricklayers by then, making it impossible to complete the huge construction plan.
The use of construction robots not only makes up for the shortage of labor, but also increases efficiency by 50%, which is a good solution at present. Some institutions predict that by 2030, the global construction market is expected to reach 110 trillion US dollars. However, the current utilization rate of robots in the construction industry is very low, and construction robots are facing a huge blue ocean market.
Firat, a partner at Hummingbird, an angel investment fund with more than 10 years of experience in technology industry investment, said after this round of financing: "Europe's infrastructure has been plagued by a shortage of skilled workers. We are very happy to support Monumental and its innovative approach to solving this challenge. Monumental's robots will not only improve the efficiency of construction sites, but the technology also has the potential to enhance safety and optimize workflows."
About Monumental
Monumental is a startup company from Amsterdam, the Netherlands, with a team of only 15 members, of which 9 are engineers responsible for R&D. They all come from Internet companies such as Qualcomm, Dyson, Palantir and Shopify. More than half of the members have entrepreneurial experience.
According to Monumental, the bricklaying robots produced by the company are equipped with advanced sensors , computer vision and small cranes. Each robot can place bricks and mortar on industrial and residential walls with a level of precision, accuracy and efficiency comparable to human bricklaying.
Construction contractors can hire Monumental as a subcontractor and introduce its robots to autonomously work as bricklayers alongside humans throughout the construction site. Monumental claims that its robots break through some of the technical barriers of existing construction robots, making it easier for humans and machines to work together without incurring additional cost burdens.
Monumental says it fully owns the entire stack, from the prototype code on the microcontroller to the final assembly and control of the robot. This vertical integration gives us the greatest degree of control, enabling R&D to solve each robotics problem at the exact layer that is most appropriate.
According to the introduction, the company introduces the thinking mode of software startups into hardware and robotics, and tries to improve software and hardware every week. In order to be able to release hardware updates every week, most of the hardware prototypes are completely made in our own workshop. At the same time, its robot is a modern distributed computing system, not a traditional "industrial hardware". There will be no PLC and CAN bus on the robot, but Intel NUC, Nvidia GPU, RP2040 and Ethernet can be found in the entire stack.
Previous article:[Veco Cup] Buke Electric participated in the "Veco Cup OFweek 2023 China Robotics Industry Annual Outstanding Supplier Award"
Next article:The trend of high quality and low price is obvious. Analysis of product performance and technical routes of mainstream collaborative robot manufacturers | MIR DATABANK
- Popular Resources
- Popular amplifiers
- Researchers develop self-learning robot that can clean washbasins like humans
- Universal Robots launches UR AI Accelerator to inject new AI power into collaborative robots
- The first batch of national standards for embodied intelligence of humanoid robots were released: divided into 4 levels according to limb movement, upper limb operation, etc.
- New chapter in payload: Universal Robots’ new generation UR20 and UR30 have upgraded performance
- Humanoid robots drive the demand for frameless torque motors, and manufacturers are actively deploying
- MiR Launches New Fleet Management Software MiR Fleet Enterprise, Setting New Standards in Scalability and Cybersecurity for Autonomous Mobile Robots
- Nidec Drive Technology produces harmonic reducers for the first time in China, growing together with the Chinese robotics industry
- DC motor driver chip, low voltage, high current, single full-bridge driver - Ruimeng MS31211
- The world's first humanoid robot factory goes into production, with an annual production target of 10,000 units, ushering in a new blue ocean for components
- LED chemical incompatibility test to see which chemicals LEDs can be used with
- Application of ARM9 hardware coprocessor on WinCE embedded motherboard
- What are the key points for selecting rotor flowmeter?
- LM317 high power charger circuit
- A brief analysis of Embest's application and development of embedded medical devices
- Single-phase RC protection circuit
- stm32 PVD programmable voltage monitor
- Introduction and measurement of edge trigger and level trigger of 51 single chip microcomputer
- Improved design of Linux system software shell protection technology
- What to do if the ABB robot protection device stops
- CGD and Qorvo to jointly revolutionize motor control solutions
- CGD and Qorvo to jointly revolutionize motor control solutions
- Keysight Technologies FieldFox handheld analyzer with VDI spread spectrum module to achieve millimeter wave analysis function
- Infineon's PASCO2V15 XENSIV PAS CO2 5V Sensor Now Available at Mouser for Accurate CO2 Level Measurement
- Advanced gameplay, Harting takes your PCB board connection to a new level!
- Advanced gameplay, Harting takes your PCB board connection to a new level!
- A new chapter in Great Wall Motors R&D: solid-state battery technology leads the future
- Naxin Micro provides full-scenario GaN driver IC solutions
- Interpreting Huawei’s new solid-state battery patent, will it challenge CATL in 2030?
- Are pure electric/plug-in hybrid vehicles going crazy? A Chinese company has launched the world's first -40℃ dischargeable hybrid battery that is not afraid of cold
- Application of Single Pair Ethernet in Building Automation
- Small and exquisite open source Python learning board Mini SAM
- I want to make a class AB car amplifier. Are there any chips you can recommend?
- TouchGFX Design" + graph waveform drawing 2
- Let you know the composition and indicators of the voltage-stabilized power supply module
- FPGA_100 Days Journey_Matrix Keyboard Design
- Playing with Zynq Serial 27 - Exporting PS hardware configuration and creating a new SDK project
- Recommend an FPGA development board, with schematic diagram
- [Mil MYS-8MMX] Mil MYS-8MMQ6-8E2D-180-C National Day Application - Use the terminal to draw
- FAQ: Developing secure IoT edge-to-cloud applications on Linux using PKCS #11 and secure devices