6 contech firms raise combined $110M

6 contech firms raise combined $110M

This audio is auto-generated. Please let us know if you have feedback.

Construction tech solutions that allow builders to either compile data into a singular platform or project it onto a jobsite to ease layout were winners in the latest, $110 million round of venture capital funding.

That number doesn’t include the whopping $405 million pulled in by FieldAI in August, a sum that puts the Bill Gates- and Nvidia-backed “robot brain” software maker in a league of its own. 

Here’s a rundown of six firms that grabbed investor cash in recent months.

GreenLite

$49.5 million

New York City-based GreenLite, which provides artificial intelligence-powered permitting review software, raised $49.5 million in a Series B funding round, according to a Sept. 15 news release. The round was led by global software investor Insight Partners. Energize Capital also participated, alongside existing investors Craft Ventures, LiveOak Ventures and Chicago Ventures.

GreenLite uses its AI-powered digital plan review tool, LiteTable, to help customers with permitting compliance, according to the release. The software can ingest plan sets, identify compliance flags and code requirements and find relevant guidance from GreenLite’s comment library based on compliance patterns within the specific jurisdictions.

With the capital, GreenLite will expand its go-to-market efforts and enter new verticals, including lodging, industrial and logistics, clean energy infrastructure and residential development while advancing its technology platform.

Mechasys

$23 million

Mechasys, a firm that specializes in projected reality technology, raised $23 million in a Series A funding round, the startup announced on Aug. 26. Canadian growth equity fund Idealist Capital led the round, with follow-on participation from existing investor Fondaction, a Quebec-based pension fund.

The Montreal-based startup uses its tech, known as the XR projector, to create true 1:1 scale layouts with millimetric accuracy, eliminating guesswork and significantly reducing rework, according to the news release. The tech is used on more than 200 construction projects across over a dozen countries, according to the firm.

With the cash, Mechasys will accelerate the deployment of its third-generation XR Projector, per the release.

DroneDeploy

$15 million

San Francisco-based reality capture platform DroneDeploy has raised $15 million in strategic funding and reached break-even, according to a Sept. 9 news release from the company. Existing investors in the firm include co-lead investors Emergence Capital and Scale Venture Partners, as well as Airtree Ventures, Bessemer Venture Partners and Uncork Capital.

The fundraise was targeted behind two new AI products, Progress AI and Safety AI, according to the news release. Builders can use Progress AI’s vision-language solution to deliver automated progress tracking from drone and 360 walkthrough data, while Safety AI tracks jobsites to ensure OSHA and safety compliance, according to the company’s website.

The capital will go toward DroneDeploy’s robotics capabilities and help advance autonomous capture for quadruped, aerial and future humanoid systems, per the release.

LightYX 

$11 million

Construction tech startup LightYX, which specializes in precise, on-site laser projection of building plans, raised $11 million in Series A funding, according to a Sept. 2 news release. The round was led by Nova by Saint-Gobain, the venture arm of construction materials giant Saint-Gobain. Yachad Capital Partners, Shibumi International, Somersault Ventures and private investors in real estate and construction from Israel also participated.

LightYX, headquartered in Tel Aviv with operations in New York City, has developed an electro-optical system that uses laser projection to display construction plans directly onto floors, ceilings, and walls with 1/16-inch accuracy, or under 2 millimeters, per the company. The system also scans and adapts plans in real time to reflect field conditions.

In addition to private investments, LightYX has received six grants from the Israel Innovation Authority since its inception, totaling $3.3 million. With the cash, LightYX will target U.S. expansion, accelerate product development, build new partnerships in the U.S. and Europe and deepen customer relationships, per the release.

View the original article and our Inspiration here


Comments

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *