We’ve been following the progress of the Hadrian X bricklaying robot since it first started flexing its giant telescopic arm back in 2015, and have seen the team behind it make a few notable ...
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 ...
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 ...
How does the bricklaying robot work? Monumental's bricklaying robots are agile, artificial intelligence-powered machines that navigate construction sites like self-driving cars. They work in teams of ...
Students at SGS College in Stroud start with the bricklaying basics in Level 1 before moving up to Level 2 A college in Gloucestershire says more people are enrolling to learn a trade in the face of a ...
BBC Three’s Brickies reveals some things that might surprise you about one of the world’s oldest trades. Bricks are all around us, and yet most of us never think about the people who lay them.
Robots that can lay six times as many bricks a day as human builders are set to turn the construction industry on its head. New York-based firm Construction Robotics has developed a robot called SAM ...
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