Sentinel & Enterprise

Spot can handle rough terrain

- By Marie Szaniszlo

Boston Dynamics has found a way to use robotic dogs without terrifying people.

The maker of “Spot” — a 71.7pound, 33.1-inch-tall, fourlegged robot — has teamed up with DroneDeplo­y, a drone software provider, and Brasfield & Gorrie, one of the nation’s largest privately held constructi­on firms, to use the robots to automate constructi­on documentat­ion.

“It definitely gets a lot of stares, I don’t think out of fear but more out of shock and awe,” said Jake Lovelace, a Brasfield & Gorrie innovation specialist.

Outfitted with a 360-degree camera, Spot allows workers to autonomous­ly capture data from building interiors and take close-up photos to document the progress a project has made for the bid process or inspection.

It’s built so that it can navigate rough terrain and also has sensors for noise, carbon dioxide and particulat­e levels, making it unnecessar­y for humans to risk going into potentiall­y unsafe places, Lovelace said.

Earlier this year, the constructi­on company began col

laborating with Boston Dynamics and DroneDeplo­y to develop an industry-first workflow for automating 360-degree, video-based constructi­on documentat­ion.

Through its new feature, 360 Walkthroug­h, DroneDeplo­y now works with both drones and on-the-ground, 360-degree cameras like the one Spot is equipped with to provide a digital reconstruc­tion of any job site.

At $74,500, Spot doesn’t come cheaply, Lovelace said, but it can save companies money in the long-run on work an assistant project manager normally would have to spend hours to do.

He doesn’t anticipate the robot eliminatin­g jobs, though; instead, it’s more likely to change them, he says, by freeing up employees to do work that requires critical thinking.

He expects Brasfield & Gorrie to have several Spots within the next few years.

“We’re proving that Spot is more than a flashy new product,” Lovelace said.

“It’s becoming increasing­ly important to have robotics. Companies not keeping on top of technology are going to lag behind.”

The constructi­on industry isn’t the only one that’s used Spot. The robot also has been used by manufactur­ing companies, nuclear power plants and even

Cirque du Soleil, the Montreal-based, contempora­ry circus producer, said Brian Ringley, a constructi­on technology manager at Boston Dynamics.

During the height of the COVID-19 pandemic, Brigham and Women’s Hospital also used Spot to help do patient intake by equipping the robot with a tablet,

Ringley said, so that doctors and nurses could interview prospectiv­e patients remotely, without risk of exposure to the virus.

 ?? PHOTOS COURTESY OF BRASFIELD & GORRIE ?? Spot the four-legged robot, which sells for $75,000, is being used by constructi­on industries to do 360-degree angle photograph of all the locations or rooms in extensive job sites.
PHOTOS COURTESY OF BRASFIELD & GORRIE Spot the four-legged robot, which sells for $75,000, is being used by constructi­on industries to do 360-degree angle photograph of all the locations or rooms in extensive job sites.

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