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Tech

Robo-brickie emerges in East Yorkshire as nuclear expertise is turned to housebuilding

Tech entrepreneurs are building test properties ahead of commercial production

Construction Automation’s Automatic Brick Laying Robot

An East Yorkshire company is laying the foundations to revolutionise the housebuilding industry – by creating the º£½ÇÊÓÆµ’s first home built by a robot

Pocklington-based Construction Automation started work on the three-bedroom house in Everingham this week, a modern property being built from traditional bricks and mortar.

But there is nothing traditional about the way the walls are being constructed.

Instead of bricklayers and labourers, the house is being built by Construction Automation’s Automatic Brick Laying Robot (ABLR) – an innovative piece of technology that has been four years in development.

In a world first, the robot will lay all the bricks, blocks, and mortar. It is also the first machine of its type ever created that can build around corners – meaning it can construct an entire house without stopping.

Construction Automation was formed in May 2016 by entrepreneurs David Longbottom and Stuart Parkes, building on work the latter had done in nuclear construction and subsea pipe laying.

Stuart Parkes and David Longbottom, directors of Construction Automation, on site in Everingham where their Automatic Brick Laying Robot is building the º£½ÇÊÓÆµ’s first ever robot-built house.(Image: TPRC)

David said: “The house will contain around 10,000 bricks and will take the ABLR about two weeks to build.

“It is the first house in the º£½ÇÊÓÆµ to be built by a robot, and possibly the first in the world.