The extraordinary Hadrian X bricklaying robot rocks up to a building site looking like a regular truck, then extends a 32-m (105-ft) boom arm and starts precisely laying up to 300 large masonry blocks ...
Artificial intelligence already powers driverless cars, virtual assistants and autonomous warehouse robots. And now, technology entrepreneurs are using their expertise to take on the challenges of ...
Jesse Orrall (he/him/his) is a Senior Video Producer for CNET. He covers future tech, sustainability and the social impact of technology. He is co-host of CNET's "What The Future" series and Executive ...
Meet Hadrian, an Australian brick-laying robot capable of laying 1,000 bricks per hour and constructing a property’s framework at a rate 20 times faster than a human bricklayer — and because Hadrian ...
A recent report by the Arch Daily discusses how automated technology, particularly bricklaying robotics, have evolved from as far back as the 1960s. According to the article, the Motor Mason of 1967 ...
That machine could complete a full-sized house in two days. Last year, FBR (which used to stand for Fastbrick Robotics), showed off the new Hadrian X which, at top speed, could stack 500 USA-format ...
A brick-laying robot named Hadrian X has broken its own record for speed, which is now up to 200 concrete blocks per hour—with the next landmark set at 240. (Its sibling robot Hadrian 112 aims to ...
The construction industry was already suffering from a labor shortage when the coronavirus pandemic struck. Within one of the least-digitized industries in the U.S., many contractors have seen ...
Alan Kohler here and I'm talking to Mark Pivac, who is the CEO of FBR Ltd (ASX: FBR). We got a query from a subscriber saying, "What's going on with Fastbrick Robotics?" and we thought we'd just check ...