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Bricklaying Robots and Exoskeletons Are the Future of the Construction Industry (vice.com)

David Silverberg reports via Motherboard: One of the most staid and digitally conservative industries is on the verge of a robotic makeover. The global construction space isn't known for ushering new tech into their workforce, but a painful labour shortage, calls for increased worker safety and more low-cost housing, and the need to catch up to other tech-savvy sectors is giving upstarts in robotics and exoskeletons their big moment. The construction industry isn't immune to this phenomenon, but robots and humans may increasingly work hand-in-hand in industrial sectors, according to Brian Turmail, senior executive director of public affairs at the Associated General Contractors of America. This is especially true when the construction industry en masse uses exoskeleton vests, which aim to assist workers with heavy loads and thus reduce their risk of injury.

The Hadrian X is a bricklaying robot courtesy Australia's Fastbrick Robotics, which uses its 30-meter metal arm to lay bricks at a rate of 1,000 bricks per hour, compared to a human worker's average of 1,000 a day. Due for release in late 2017, Hadrian X can read a 3D CAD model of the house and then it follows those instructions precisely, working day and night. New York-based Construction Robotics has also developed its take on a bricklaying robot. SAM can lay 3,000 bricks a day, and the company said it's about time this industry got a whiff of the change almost every other market has been seeing.

2 of 228 comments (clear)

  1. Re:"a painful labour shortage"?! Bollocks! by Ol+Olsoc · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Actually, there is a surplus of workers who believe their labour is worth more than it really is. That's the real problem and it is being rectified.

    Quit picking on the CEO's.

    --
    The shepherds did so well protecting the flock that the sheep no longer believed that wolves existed.
  2. Re:"a painful labour shortage"?! Bollocks! by Wrath0fb0b · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Pay a proper wage and this "labor shortage" will disappear immediately.

    And how much would you have to charge for a new starter home? Would that price be beyond the budget of most first time aspiring homebuyers?

    The definition of a "proper wage" has always been competition between how much buyers are willing to pay for the final product and how much suppliers are willing to sell their goods/labor. You can't just point at one side and way "raise the wage" without explaining why buyers are going to pay more and what impact that will have on them. At least for me, keeping the barriers to homeownership low seems like a very worthy social goal, one that needs to be balanced against all the other worthy goals we have.