wash windows with robot arms
I would put window washing fairly high (so to speak) on the list of jobs it makes sense to automate. Certainly, the gig qualifies as both dirty and dangerous — and surprisingly, doesn’t come with all that much in the way of hazard pay. That’s something you would think might come standard with a job that requires you to dangle hundreds of feet in the air.
Skyline made some news last year with the delivery of Ozmo, a robotic system designed to clean those hard-to-reach spots on the sides of skyscrapers — façade maintenance, as it’s known. At its base, the system is a pair of Kuka industrial robotic arms mounted on a suspended platform.
It uses lidar to determine the proximity of the glass it intends to clear while relying on force sensors to ensure it doesn’t break anything in the process. Baked-in algorithms ensure a steady robotic hand under extremely windy conditions, while the company says it’s capable of recalculating an optimal cleaning path hundreds of times per minute.
Today the New York-based startup announced $6.5 million in what it’s deemed “pre-Series A” funding (honestly, these funding round labels are beginning to lose any meaning they may have had). Skyline Standard Holdings led the round. The round brings the firm’s total funding up to $9 million.
Certainly, there are plenty of opportunities there with tens of millions of windows that need cleaning in New York City, alone.
wash windows with robot arms