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Shamoon Siddiqui, CEO and Founder of Human Friendly Robotics, joins The Tech Trek to break down what it really takes to bring robotics into construction. This is not a futuristic thought experiment. It is a grounded conversation about where robots can create value now, why construction has lagged so badly on productivity, and how focused automation could reshape one of the world’s biggest industries.
At the center of the discussion is Tyler, a tile laying robot built as a practical entry point into construction automation. Shamoon explains why repeatable workflows matter, where human skill still wins, and how robotics can improve speed, safety, and job site economics without needing to look like a science fiction demo.
In this episode
• Why construction productivity has moved backward while other industries have surged ahead• Why tiling is the right entry point for construction robotics• How Human Friendly Robotics thinks about deployment, rentals, and product iteration• Where robots can reduce hidden job site injuries tied to repetitive strain• Why the long game is much bigger than tile, with plumbing, electrical, and HVAC in sight
Timestamped highlights
00:35 Why construction is the right market for robotics right now03:56 The bigger shift from humans moving atoms to machines handling more physical work08:29 Why the business model is built around rentals, not one time equipment sales10:24 The wedge strategy today and the larger vision across licensed trades12:12 The overlooked safety problem of repetitive strain in construction20:44 Why useful robots matter more than robots built for flashy demos
“Version one is not going to be as good as version five, but if you continue to rent it from us, we can make sure you get version five when it’s ready.”
Practical takeaway
The smartest automation wedge is not the flashiest one. Start with repetitive, measurable work, prove productivity gains in the real world, and expand from there.
Follow The Tech Trek for more conversations on robotics, AI, startups, and the technologies changing how real work gets done.
#ConstructionTech #Robotics #Automation #ai #FutureOfWork
By Elevano5
7474 ratings
Shamoon Siddiqui, CEO and Founder of Human Friendly Robotics, joins The Tech Trek to break down what it really takes to bring robotics into construction. This is not a futuristic thought experiment. It is a grounded conversation about where robots can create value now, why construction has lagged so badly on productivity, and how focused automation could reshape one of the world’s biggest industries.
At the center of the discussion is Tyler, a tile laying robot built as a practical entry point into construction automation. Shamoon explains why repeatable workflows matter, where human skill still wins, and how robotics can improve speed, safety, and job site economics without needing to look like a science fiction demo.
In this episode
• Why construction productivity has moved backward while other industries have surged ahead• Why tiling is the right entry point for construction robotics• How Human Friendly Robotics thinks about deployment, rentals, and product iteration• Where robots can reduce hidden job site injuries tied to repetitive strain• Why the long game is much bigger than tile, with plumbing, electrical, and HVAC in sight
Timestamped highlights
00:35 Why construction is the right market for robotics right now03:56 The bigger shift from humans moving atoms to machines handling more physical work08:29 Why the business model is built around rentals, not one time equipment sales10:24 The wedge strategy today and the larger vision across licensed trades12:12 The overlooked safety problem of repetitive strain in construction20:44 Why useful robots matter more than robots built for flashy demos
“Version one is not going to be as good as version five, but if you continue to rent it from us, we can make sure you get version five when it’s ready.”
Practical takeaway
The smartest automation wedge is not the flashiest one. Start with repetitive, measurable work, prove productivity gains in the real world, and expand from there.
Follow The Tech Trek for more conversations on robotics, AI, startups, and the technologies changing how real work gets done.
#ConstructionTech #Robotics #Automation #ai #FutureOfWork