The Denver Post

Scythe Robotics wants to build automated mower

- By Aldo Svaldi

Longmont-based Scythe Robotics needs more space to handle about 7,000 reservatio­ns it has received for its automated robotic lawn mowers that landscapin­g contractor­s across the country are clamoring to get their hands on.

After weighing whether to use offshore production or build a factory in either Florida, Texas or Colorado, the startup decided to stay put in Longmont. Helping seal that decision was an award of $372,000 from the state Strategic Fund that the Colorado Economic Developmen­t Commission approved Wednesday morning. That amount could have been larger, but it was limited by the matching funds Longmont provided.

“We have really transition­ed and are starting to ramp production. This grant is a recognitio­n of that. We want to stick around here in Longmont,” said CEO Jack Morrison, who founded Scythe Robotics with Isaac Roberts and Davis Foster in 2017.

The company has built 20 of its robotic mowers and hopes to build an additional 200 of its fifth-generation model by the end of next year, Morrison said.

Once it gets a 50,000-square foot facility completed, it will be off to the races.

“We are aiming to make 10,000 machines a year by that point, so we can satisfy demand,” Morrison said.

Between manufactur­ing, engineerin­g, sales and administra­tive positions, the company is looking to create 394 net new jobs paying an average annual wage of $116,881, which is 157% of the average for Boulder County. About half of those jobs will be in manufactur­ing. The company has 37 employees, including 28 in Colorado.

Landscaper­s have long struggled to find enough employees willing to take on the physically demanding work. Many have relied on crews from Mexico and elsewhere, but bringing in seasonal workers on temporary visas has become much more difficult. And the pandemic didn’t help.

Mowing robots offer a way to automate more mundane tasks so the fewer workers available can take on more interestin­g and specialize­d assignment­s. But the machines are complicate­d and require many more sensors, cameras and safeguards than those robotic vacuums free

roaming in homes. The consequenc­es of their failure to recognize obstacles, whether it is a rabbit or a sprinkler head or bike path with heavy traffic, are more severe and potentiall­y catastroph­ic.

Even if the mowers could be built more cheaply overseas, they weigh 1,300 pounds, which makes shipping costs problemati­c. The numerous supplychai­n issues that arose during the pandemic also showed the importance of keeping manufactur­ing close by, although the company still will need to source key components overseas, such as batteries, chips and sensors. To the greatest degree possible, Scythe Robotics is trying to keep its supply chain domestic.

“We think we are going to be more cost-effective building them here in Longmont. It is about keeping the manufactur­ing and engineerin­g teams closer together so we can learn together and get better as we scale,” Morrison said.

The commission also awarded $164,284 in Job Growth Incentive Tax Credits to a Bay Area company that uses data, machine learning and artificial intelligen­ce tools to help manufactur­ing plants and real estate profession­als streamline their operations.

Project Our Nation is looking at Denver, the Bay Area or Ann Arbor, Mich., to establish its headquarte­rs. It expects to create 36 new jobs paying an average annual wage of $75,205.

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