Dusty Robotics
United States · dustyrobotics.com
SnapshotCompany claim
Dusty Robotics develops robots for construction industry. Flagship product FieldPrinter automates layout with mobile robotics, increasing efficiency and safety while reducing labor and costs.
- Founded
- Not disclosed
- HQ
- United States
- Models
- 3
- Categories
- 2
Product families
Is this your company? Claim this profile to add verified data, respond to our analysis, and upgrade claims to Verified.
Claim this profile1. Executive Overview {#executive-overview}
Dusty Robotics is a United States-based construction robotics company whose flagship product, the FieldPrinter, automates layout printing on job sites using mobile robotics technology. The company positions itself as a solution to three structural challenges facing the global construction industry: a persistent skilled-labor shortage, escalating project costs, and increasingly stringent delivery timelines. With robots described as deployed throughout the US, Dusty has moved beyond prototype or pilot status and is operating at commercial scale in the North American market.
The company's core value proposition rests on accuracy and ease of use: its About page describes the FieldPrinter as "the most accurate mobile robot on the planet," enabling contractors to build with confidence that design intent is faithfully translated to the job site. Dusty's emphasis on professionalism, simplicity, and contractor-grade durability reflects a deliberate go-to-market posture — these are tools designed for working job sites, not lab demonstrations. Third-party coverage from The Robot Report, metrology.news, and PMD Corp confirms independent industry recognition of the platform.
Not yet disclosed: founding date, headcount, total deployments, and revenue figures. Dusty is invited to claim or correct any of these details via this report.
Latest news
- KEENON Humanoid Pours Drinks at GCS 2026, 100,000 Others Run HotelsYanko Design·2026-06-15GENERAL
2. The Company Story {#the-company-story}
Dusty Robotics was founded in the United States with the explicit mission of bringing robotic automation to the construction industry — described on its own site as "the largest industry globally." The company's founding philosophy, as stated on its About page, is that "innovation and creativity are necessary to create revolutionary change," and that the construction sector is overdue for a technological step-change. This positions Dusty not as an incremental toolmaker but as a company self-consciously attempting to reshape an industry it characterizes as burdened by labor shortages, cost pressures, and tight schedules.
The flagship product, the FieldPrinter, represents the materialization of that mission: a mobile robot that prints layout lines directly onto concrete floors or subfloors, replacing a labor-intensive, error-prone manual process that has been performed the same way for decades. By automating layout, Dusty targets one of the earliest and most consequential steps in interior construction — mistakes at layout propagate through every subsequent trade.
A notable 2025 milestone reported by metrology.news is the integration of Hexagon's Leica AT500 laser tracker into the FieldPrinter platform, indicating an ongoing technology development trajectory and a partnership with an established metrology brand. The FieldPrinter is currently available in North America. Specific founding date, funding history, and named milestone deployments are not yet publicly disclosed; Dusty is invited to supplement the public record.
3. Product Portfolio {#product-portfolio}
Products & versions






Dusty's disclosed product lineup centers on the FieldPrinter, a mobile robot that automates the layout process on construction job sites, printing lines and reference marks at machine precision directly onto surfaces. The FieldPrinter is the company's market-facing flagship and the basis for what Dusty calls the FieldPrint Platform — suggesting a software-and-hardware system that encompasses design ingestion, robot operation, and quality verification, though detailed platform specifications are not yet fully public.
Two additional product entries — jenco-2 and topa-3d — appear in the company's product data but carry insufficient public descriptions to characterize definitively. These may represent accessories, complementary hardware, or platform extensions. Not yet disclosed: full specifications, pricing, and use-case details for these entries. Dusty is invited to clarify their role within the product family.
The overall shape of the portfolio suggests a company in the process of expanding from a single flagship robot toward a broader platform offering, potentially incorporating 3D sensing or additional field instrumentation. The integration of the Leica AT500 laser tracker, as reported by metrology.news in July 2025, points toward enhanced metrology capabilities layered onto the core mobile printing platform.
4. Technology Stack {#technology-stack}
The FieldPrinter's publicly stated performance claim — "the most accurate mobile robot on the planet" — points to a technology stack built around high-precision localization and motion control. The July 2025 integration of Hexagon's Leica AT500 laser tracker, as reported by metrology.news, provides meaningful technical context: the AT500 is an industrial-grade absolute laser tracker used in aerospace and precision manufacturing, and its incorporation into a construction robot represents a significant step up in localization fidelity beyond typical SLAM or wheel-odometry approaches.
Our read: The use of a laser tracker for positioning suggests that Dusty's accuracy claims are grounded in absolute metrology rather than relative or map-based navigation — a meaningful architectural choice that would differentiate the FieldPrinter from competitors relying solely on LiDAR SLAM or GPS. This approach trades some operational simplicity for substantially tighter tolerances, which is appropriate for layout work where fractions of an inch matter.
Third-party coverage from PMD Corp references precision motion technology as a component of autonomous construction robots in Dusty's context, suggesting the drive and motion subsystems are also engineered to tight specifications rather than adapted from general-purpose mobile robot platforms.
Our read: The FieldPrint Platform name implies a software layer — likely handling BIM or CAD file ingestion, job sequencing, and printed-layout verification — though the architecture of this software stack is not publicly detailed. Limited public technical detail exists on autonomy stack specifics (perception pipeline, path planning algorithms, or cloud connectivity). Dusty is invited to disclose or correct technical specifications.
5. Research, Papers, Authors, Labs {#research-papers}
Company-linked papers
Dusty Robotics does not appear to be a research-publishing organization in the academic sense. This is consistent with the profile of a commercially focused construction-robotics company; the relevant output is deployed robots and customer outcomes, not peer-reviewed papers. No published research papers, named research labs, or academic author affiliations have been identified in the available data.
6. Media Evidence {#media-evidence}
Media library
Independent press coverage has been identified from three outlets: The Robot Report (therobotreport.com) maintains a dedicated Dusty Robotics archive, indicating repeated coverage over time rather than a single mention. Metrology News (metrology.news) published a substantive piece dated July 28, 2025, covering the integration of Hexagon's Leica AT500 laser tracker into the FieldPrinter platform — the most technically specific third-party piece in the available data. PMD Corp (pmdcorp.com) references Dusty's platform in the context of precision motion components for autonomous construction robots, providing supplier-side corroboration of the hardware stack.
7. Commercial Reality {#commercial-reality}
Customers & deployments
Dusty's About page states that robots are "deployed throughout the US," which confirms commercial deployment at geographic scale within North America. The company describes its solutions as "the tool of choice for professionals" and references use on "the most demanding jobs," language consistent with an established contractor customer base rather than early pilots.
Revenue, total number of deployed units, named customer accounts, and ROI metrics are not disclosed in any available public source. Dusty is invited to share deployment counts, named customers, or verified productivity benchmarks so this section can be updated with specifics.
8. Markets and Use Cases {#markets-use-cases}
The FieldPrinter's primary use case is construction layout — the process of transferring design drawings onto a physical job site surface so that subsequent trades (framing, mechanical, electrical, plumbing) know precisely where to install their work. This is a universal step in commercial and large-scale residential construction, making Dusty's addressable market broad across the construction sector.
The company's framing of construction as "the largest industry globally" and its emphasis on labor shortage and cost pressure situates the FieldPrinter squarely in commercial construction — the segment most acutely affected by skilled-labor shortfalls and where the cost of rework from layout errors is highest. Interior fit-out of large commercial buildings (office towers, hospitals, warehouses, data centers) represents the most natural deployment environment given that the robot operates on flat concrete subfloors and requires indoor conditions for laser tracker-based localization.
The FieldPrint Platform's implied software capabilities — ingesting design files and printing them at scale — also position Dusty within the broader construction technology (ConTech) ecosystem, where BIM adoption is accelerating and the gap between digital design and physical execution is a recognized pain point. As layout accuracy directly reduces rework costs and trade-coordination conflicts, the ROI narrative maps cleanly onto the concerns of general contractors and specialty subcontractors alike.
Current geographic availability is limited to North America, per the company's own disclosure.
9. Competitive Landscape {#competitive-landscape}
Competitive comparison
| Robot | Maker | Autonomy | Conf. |
|---|---|---|---|
| iRobot Roomba Combo 10 Max | iRobot | Autonomous | 0.90 |
| Mobile ALOHA (Stanford) | Stanford University | Teleoperated | 0.90 |
| 1X NEO | 1X Technologies | Remote-Assisted | 0.90 |
The construction layout automation space sits at the intersection of construction robotics, precision positioning, and ConTech software — a segment that has attracted both purpose-built startups and larger robotics platforms extending into job-site applications. Companies operating mobile robots for job-site marking, measurement, or spatial data capture form the most direct peer group. The relevant competitive dimensions include localization accuracy, ease of use for non-specialist operators, integration with BIM workflows, and total cost of deployment relative to manual layout crews.
Dusty's positioning around extreme accuracy (underscored by the Leica AT500 integration) and contractor-grade simplicity represents a deliberate differentiation strategy in a market where technical capability and field usability are frequently in tension. The module above surfaces the most relevant named peers.
10. Country Advantage / Geopolitical {#geopolitical}
Section not material for this company.
11. Hype vs Real vs Ugly {#hype-real-ugly}
Claim tracker
Verified and externally corroborated:
- Commercial deployment of the FieldPrinter across the US is supported by both the company's own About page and independent coverage in The Robot Report and metrology.news.
- The integration of Hexagon's Leica AT500 laser tracker is reported by an independent trade publication (metrology.news, July 2025), providing external validation of a specific, named technology partnership.
- PMD Corp's published reference to Dusty's platform corroborates the use of precision motion hardware components.
Company claims — taken at face value, not independently verified:
- "The most accurate mobile robot on the planet" is a strong superlative stated on Dusty's own About page. It is a company claim. The Leica AT500 integration is consistent with high-accuracy ambitions, but independent benchmark data against alternative systems is not publicly available.
- "Robots deployed throughout the US" is a geographic scale claim. Exact deployment counts have not been disclosed.
- Efficiency, safety, and cost-reduction benefits are asserted on the company's site without disclosed supporting data. These claims are plausible given the nature of the product but remain company claims until independently verified metrics are published.
Not yet disclosed — fixable gaps:
- Quantified accuracy specifications (e.g., tolerance in millimeters or fractions of an inch) are not in the public record. Publishing these would substantially strengthen the accuracy claim.
- Customer case studies with named contractors and measured outcomes (labor hours saved, rework rates, project cost impact) are not yet public. Dusty is invited to disclose or link verified references.
12. Future Scenarios {#future-scenarios}
Bull case — Our read: Dusty consolidates its position as the accuracy-first standard for commercial construction layout in North America, accelerates adoption as BIM mandates and labor shortages deepen, and expands the FieldPrint Platform into adjacent workflow steps (as-built verification, trade coordination handoffs). The Hexagon/Leica partnership opens doors to larger enterprise and infrastructure projects where metrology-grade precision is contractually required. International expansion follows North American saturation.
Base case — Our read: The FieldPrinter grows steadily within the commercial construction segment, particularly among large general contractors and specialty subcontractors managing high-volume interior fit-out. Platform software becomes a stickiness mechanism. Geographic availability remains North America-focused through the near term. Growth is real but measured by the pace of construction industry technology adoption, which is historically deliberate.
Bear case — Our read: Construction industry sales cycles and capital budget constraints slow deployment velocity. Larger robotics or ConTech platforms with broader job-site presence bundle layout functionality, compressing Dusty's standalone value proposition. The accuracy premium commands less pricing power than anticipated if "good enough" alternatives emerge. Not yet a visible threat based on available data, but a structural risk for any single-product robotics company.
13. What to Watch {#what-to-watch}
- Accuracy specifications: Publication of quantified tolerance data (mm-level or better) would validate the "most accurate" claim and sharpen competitive differentiation.
- Named customer deployments: Any disclosed contractor relationships or project case studies will signal commercial maturity and provide ROI benchmarks.
- FieldPrint Platform software development: Watch for announcements around BIM integrations, as-built verification, or cloud connectivity that indicate platform expansion beyond hardware.
- jenco-2 and topa-3d: Clarification of these product entries will reveal whether Dusty is building a multi-product portfolio or a hardware ecosystem around the FieldPrinter.
- Hexagon/Leica relationship depth: Whether the AT500 integration is a supplier relationship or a deeper strategic partnership will have implications for distribution, support, and enterprise access.
- International expansion signals: Any announcement lifting the North America-only availability restriction would mark a significant commercial inflection.
- Funding rounds or financial disclosures: No funding history is public; any disclosed round or investor would provide a valuation signal and growth trajectory indicator.
- Coverage in construction trade press (Engineering News-Record, Construction Dive, etc.): Expansion beyond robotics-specialist outlets into mainstream construction media would indicate broader contractor awareness.
14. Sources & Methodology {#sources-methodology}
Primary source: All factual claims in this report are grounded exclusively in data extracted from Dusty Robotics' own website (dustyrobotics.com), including the About page, product listings, and site metadata. All such claims are labeled company-claim and are taken at face value; they reflect how the company represents itself, not independently audited facts.
Third-party press sources (independent validation):
- metrology.news — "Dusty Robotics Elevates Construction Accuracy with Hexagon's Leica AT500 Laser Tracker" (2025-07-28)
- therobotreport.com — Dusty Robotics Archives (multiple articles, dates not individually specified)
- pmdcorp.com — "Autonomous Construction Bots Unleashed: Powered by PMD's Precision Motion"
Computed relations: Competitive positioning, market categorization, and technology stack inferences are derived algorithmically from product descriptions, use-case tags, and industry classifications. All inferences are labeled Our read: in the text.
Methodology rubric (applied uniformly to every company in this series):
- No facts are introduced that are not present in the source data.
- Gaps are named as gaps and framed as fixable, with an explicit invitation to the company to claim or correct.
- Company claims are labeled as such and are never restated as independently verified facts.
- Negative characterizations require either a source citation, a labeled inference, or a "not yet disclosed" framing — never unsourced assertion.
- Analyst inferences are labeled "Our read:" throughout.

FieldPrinter
OtherDusty Robotics' FieldPrinter addresses a major construction industry challenge. Contact the manufacturer for detailed specifications and availability information.
Detailed specs not disclosed.
Technology stackOur read
Inferred from product specs — click through to the technology wiki:
ResearchComputed
Product comparisonComputed
Company announcement
News and Media
The company's official social & video channels · external links
News
From third-party news outlets (China & abroad) · external links