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This Huge Robot Will Drive Up and Build You a House [Video]

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Categories Latest Popular Editor's Picks Community Debate Central Featured Future Health Science Singularity University Tech Video Central Video Post If There’s Life on Europa, Robots Like These Will Find It No Technology Thrives Alone: Progress Is All About Convergence How 'Robots' of the Enlightenment Era Gave Us an Early Glimpse of Automation A Simple Blood Test Helps Cure Cancer by Catching It Early Earthquakes Will Be as Predictable as Hurricanes Thanks to AI 5 Tech Forces That Will Change Insurance for Good Surprising Embryo Study Pushes the Limits of How Life Begins This Week’s Awesome Stories From Around the Web (Through September 24th) Genetic Studies Reveal Diversity of Early Human Populations — and Pin Down When We Left Africa Ray Kurzweil: We Can Control AI Before It Controls Us Why Design Is Key to Unlocking the Genius Behind Innovation New Smart Tattoos Let You Control Your Phone Using Your Skin The Robots We've Long Imagined Are Finally Here How Private Spaceflight Went From Impossible Dream to Epic Space Race The Future of Sex, Dating, and Finding a Mate 4 Reasons Why You Should Experience Exponential Medicine 2016 Mind-Controlled Nanobots Used to Release Chemicals in Living Cockroaches This Week’s Awesome Stories From Around the Web (Through September 17th) Cultured Meat Will Remain a Distant Dream Unless We Do These 4 Things Kurzweil Says Passion Projects Are the Best Way to Learn 0 Bricklaying is a very old, traditional way to build a house—except now we have robots doing it faster than people. Hadrian X, a construction robot by Fastbrick Robotics, is a laser-guided, fully-automated bricklaying system. Its aim? Building brick houses in days instead of weeks. Fastbrick Robotics spent a decade and millions of dollars developing Hadrian X. Now, it’s almost ready for commercial deployment. Recently, the company announced an agreement with Archistruct Builders and Designers to use the robot to build 11 homes in Perth, Australia.   “The framework agreement also presents a fantastic opportunity for our commercial pilot, where we will demonstrate to the world the capabilities of the Hadrian X,” Fastbrick Robotics CEO Mark Pivack told The West Australian. We covered the Hadrian brick-laying system last year but didn’t get the chance to see it in action. The company recently released a video showing what it can do. How does Hadrian X work? Workers load the machine with bricks. It cuts them to size and feeds them up a conveyor belt inside a long, crane-like arm. Guided by a computer design and lasers, the arm swings into place and a robotic gripper at the arm’s end precisely places each brick. The system coats the bricks in a glue-like adhesive in place of traditional mortar. The whole system is built into a truck which can be driven up to the construction site. The really amazing bit? Hadrian X can lay up to 1,000 custom-sized bricks per hour, and according to Fastbrick, it will be able to build the brick frame of a full home in just days. Of course, not all homes are of brick, nor are all homebuilding robots like Hadrian. Another approach, long in the works, is the 3D printing of houses using printers that extrude concrete or other materials. USC’s Behrokh Koshnevis was one of the earliest to work on the technology with his Contour Crafting system. In recent years, China’s Winsun has made headlines too. Even 3D printing using natural materials, like mud, are beginning to look interesting. The bigger picture here? For Fastbrick, it’s about automating jobs, like bricklaying, that are already experiencing worker shortages as younger generations seek employment elsewhere. More than that, it’s about reducing the cost and time investment of building homes, with the hope we’ll be able to supply more of them to areas where housing is most needed. With up to 100 million people homeless worldwide, the world could use more self-contained systems of construction and homebuilding to scale for cheap. And even as the future of work remains uncertain, with tech like this we'll at least have a stronger foundation to build from. Image credit: Fastbrick/Gary Paull/YouTube About Latest Posts Tweet MeAndrew operates as a media producer and archivist. Generating backups of critical cultural data, he has worked across various industries — entertainment, art, and technology — telling emerging stories via recording and distribution. Tweet Me This Huge Robot Will Drive Up and Build You a House [Video] - September 30, 2016 Ray Kurzweil: We Can Control AI Before It Controls Us - September 22, 2016 Kurzweil Says Passion Projects Are the Best Way to Learn - September 15, 2016

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