Humanoide Roboter in der Baubranche: Eine Zukunftsvision – Humanoide Roboter befinden sich noch im Pilotstadium, könnten sich aber als Lösung für das Produktivitätsproblem der Baubranche erweisen. Wie können sich Branchenführer auf ihren Berufseinstieg vorbereiten?

    https://www.mckinsey.com/industries/engineering-construction-and-building-materials/our-insights/humanoid-robots-in-the-construction-industry-a-future-vision

    Share.

    2 Kommentare

    1. From the article

      For decades**,** the construction industry has wrestled with both rising demand and shrinking labor capacity. Productivity has stagnated, and the situation could soon worsen: Many workers are nearing retirement, and fewer young people are entering the field because of safety concerns, uncertainty about future prospects, and the physical intensity of construction work. To alleviate the labor crunch, some businesses have already automated a few common activities, including bricklaying and concreting, using purpose-built robots. A logical next step might involve the use of general-purpose robots, which can perform diverse, unrelated tasks across multiple settings.

      General-purpose robots could be useful in a range of construction activities, from moving heavy concrete blocks to welding and plumbing. Although these robots come in various forms, humanoids—those that resemble people in size and shape—attract the most attention. Humanoids are still relatively early in development, but they could potentially transform industries if developers and other stakeholders can overcome technological, regulatory, financial, and operational hurdles.

    2. I had a really interesting conversation with a construction executive who talked about the potential of teleoperated robotic systems for construction. 

      He was fairly convinced that an AI control system wasn’t necessary as long as they could get the sensors good enough to allow workers to effectively manipulate tools and perform tasks, and that it would be a huge potential efficiency booster specifically because a job site without humans present wouldn’t require anything like the level of safety restrictions we have now. 

      A ton of potentially productive time on site is currently spent just making sure people don’t get hurt, and a lot of processes could be made significantly more efficient if you could do them without considering worker safety in a human-less setting. 

    Leave A Reply