Wednesday 15 July, 2026
[email protected]
Resilience Media
  • News
    • Events
    • Interview
    • Startups
    • Venture
    • Weekly Digest
  • Resilience Conference
    • Resilience Conference Warsaw 2026
    • Resilience Conference Copenhagen 2026
    • Resilience Conference London 2026
  • About
  • Guest Posts
    • Author a Post
  • Subscribe
No Result
View All Result
  • News
    • Events
    • Interview
    • Startups
    • Venture
    • Weekly Digest
  • Resilience Conference
    • Resilience Conference Warsaw 2026
    • Resilience Conference Copenhagen 2026
    • Resilience Conference London 2026
  • About
  • Guest Posts
    • Author a Post
  • Subscribe
No Result
View All Result
Resilience Media
No Result
View All Result

Monumental seals up $32M to build out its fleet of construction robots

Palantir alums turn their attention away from dashboards to concrete problems

Ingrid LundenbyIngrid Lunden
July 15, 2026
in News, Startups, Venture
Robot building a canal wall in The Netherlands

Monumental's brick-laying robot at work on a canal.

Share on Linkedin

Monumental — a construction tech company founded and run by Palantir alums — has raised $32 million to scale its business across Europe and break into the US market. A new investor, the US-based firm Khosla Ventures, is leading the round, with previous European backers Plural and Hummingbird participating.

You Might Also Like

SCOOP: Cambridge Aerospace is closing in on $300M at a $3.4B valuation

Germany’s space awakening

Cosine COO: AI belongs in the bunker, not the cloud

Monumental is based out of Amsterdam, and so far the startup has made some very interesting headway.

It’s designed both the software and hardware for robots that work as bricklayers; it’s created a ‘digital twin’ platform called Atrium for building planning, to map out what those robots will do; and it runs a services operation that provisions all of this to clients.

Monumental’s robot fleet currently numbers 150 and has been working across multiple projects, often simultaneously, across the UK and the continent, constructing homes, schools, a hotel, a community centre and — hat-tip to the company’s Dutch roots — a canal.

Robots are shaping up to be a key cornerstone of the thesis around industrial resilience.

The construction industry — just like the materials that are used for it — is a significant contributor to GDP for western countries (around 13% of global GDP, per McKinsey; more like between 4% and 8% in Western Europe), providing jobs, helping in the creation of infrastructure to enable other industries, and building homes. Yet today a major labour shortage in the construction market slows down how it works — a shortage that could be even more acute in a critical situation when labour might get diverted elsewhere but infrastructure still needs to be built.

In the UK, for example, it’s been estimated that the country needs 20,000 more bricklayers to hit its housebuilding targets, but only 1,990 qualified in 2024.

Robots have come along a lot in the last several years and will be stepping into the construction gap, said Salar al Khafaji, co-founder and CEO.

“It seems obvious that robots will be evolving” to fill this and other workforce holes, he said in an interview. “There are already so many things coming together, and Monumental proves that we are beyond the demo-ware stage.”

This also potentially offsets the threat aspect of the proposition — that is, robots and AI taking over our jobs. Even if there were thousands of robots in Monumental’s fleet, argued Al Khafaji, it wouldn’t make dent in the shortage of labour.

Al Khafaji came up with the idea for the company, he said, when he was still at Palantir. The AI and big data giant acquired his previous startup, a data visualisation company called Silk. Settling into R&D at Palantir, he thought about what to do next and decided that he wanted to focus on something “meaningful and physical” — “not another dashboard,” he joked. His mind turned to infrastructure, energy and defence in the more general sense, and this is how he started thinking about construction and robots.

(Note: Al Kahfaji is thinking about this problem from another direction, too. He also happens to be an investor in the factory startup Isembard.)

Looking at how the construction industry operates, he saw that provisioning it as a services business made the most sense: “Construction companies subcontract work out as much as possible,” he said.

If builders were not on construction companies’ books already, chances are robots definitely would not be, since they required a whole new skill set on top of the capital cost: a new range of employees who would update, maintain and target the machines to do what needed to get done.

The company has started with bricklaying as a first step, although longer term there are a number of other jobs on building sites that could get tackled. There is also an opportunity to consider Atrium, the “digital twin” system, which today is not used as an overall blueprint planning service, but today it’s already capable of handling visualisation (thanks to the team’s previous expertise with this at Silk) and it seems that there are a lot of opportunities to expand on that, with robot or not.

For investors, it’s a long-known rule of thumb that sectors that have been slow to evolve are prime opportunities for tech disruption, and while construction has definitely already appeared on the tech radar, there is a lot more to be built, so to speak.

“Construction costs have exploded while the industry itself has barely changed in decades,” said Vinod Khosla, founder of Khosla Ventures, in a statement. “That combination has produced the housing crisis: we know how to build, we’ve just made it too expensive and too slow. Monumental is solving this by bringing robotics into the physical world, and the proof is already standing: canal walls, houses, a school, 100 structures already built by robots. Beautiful buildings, built at scale, don’t have to cost what they cost today.”

Tags: constructionindustrial technologyKhosla VenturesMonumentalrobots
Previous Post

Germany’s space awakening

Next Post

SCOOP: Cambridge Aerospace is closing in on $300M at a $3.4B valuation

Ingrid Lunden

Ingrid Lunden

Ingrid is an editor and writer. Born in Moscow, brought up in the U.S. and now based out of London, from February 2012 to May 2025, she worked at leading technology publication TechCrunch, initially as a writer and eventually as one of TechCrunch’s managing editors, leading the company’s international editorial operation and working as part of TechCrunch’s senior leadership team. She speaks Russian, French and Spanish and takes a keen interest in the intersection of technology with geopolitics.

Related News

UK MoD tests British-built anti-Shahed system in Jordan

SCOOP: Cambridge Aerospace is closing in on $300M at a $3.4B valuation

byIngrid Lundenand1 others
July 15, 2026

Defence tech investing continues to heat up in Europe amid strong calls for re-armament across NATO and the ongoing war...

view of Earth and satellite

Germany’s space awakening

byPaddy Stephens
July 15, 2026

“Our Achilles’ heel lies in space,” warned German Defence Minister Boris Pistorius at the Berlin Space Conference in September last...

Cosine COO: AI belongs in the bunker, not the cloud

Cosine COO: AI belongs in the bunker, not the cloud

byJohn Biggs
July 14, 2026

https://youtu.be/mINDTa-HobY In this conversation with Yang Li, co-founder and COO of Cosine, we discuss what sovereign AI actually means in...

Expeditions leads €15M bet on European defence software startup Project Q

Expeditions leads €15M bet on European defence software startup Project Q

byCarly Page
July 14, 2026

European defence software startup Project Q has raised €15 million in Series A funding less than a year after its...

Helsing opens its first US factory, in West Virginia, to build more HX-2 drones

Helsing opens its first US factory, in West Virginia, to build more HX-2 drones

byIngrid Lunden
July 14, 2026

In July 2025, the US government tested out Helsing drones for the first time during the Project Flytrap exercise in...

Deterrence lies in production capacity and cognitive warfare

NATO DIANA selects ten innovators for its decision superiority challenge

byJohn Biggs
July 13, 2026

NATO’s Defence Innovation Accelerator for the North Atlantic, or DIANA, has selected ten companies to take part in its Decision...

Silhouette of a drone in flight against a orange sunset sky.

Auterion to equip 50,000 Ukrainian strike drones with precision guidance tech

byPaul Sawers
July 13, 2026

Ukraine's drone war has always come down to volume and accuracy — get enough systems onto the battlefield, and get...

black corded electronic device

UK and allies warn defence sector over Russian campaign targeting internet-facing routers

byCarly Page
July 13, 2026

The UK and 18 international partners have warned organisations across the defence sector to strengthen the security of internet-facing network...

Load More
Next Post
UK MoD tests British-built anti-Shahed system in Jordan

SCOOP: Cambridge Aerospace is closing in on $300M at a $3.4B valuation

Most viewed

InVeris announces fats Drone, an integrated, multi-party drone flight simulator

Uforce raises $50M at a $1B+ valuation to build defence tech for Ukraine

Auterion, the drone software startup, eyes raising $200M at a $1.2B+ valuation

Palantir and Ukraine’s Brave1 have built a new AI “Dataroom”

Twentyfour Industries emerges from stealth with $11.8M for mass-produced drones

Senai exits stealth to help governments harness online video intelligence

Resilience Media is an independent publication covering the future of defence, security, and resilience. Our reporting focuses on emerging technologies, strategic threats, and the growing role of startups and investors in the defence of democracy.

  • About
  • News
  • Resilence Conference
    • Resilience Conference Copenhagen 2026
    • Resilience Conference Warsaw 2026
    • Resilience Conference 2026
  • Guest Posts
  • Subscribe
  • Privacy Policy
  • Terms & Conditions
  • Mission Statement & Code of Practice
  • Press

© 2026 Resilience Media

No Result
View All Result
  • Home
  • About
  • Subscribe
  • Events
  • Guest Posts
  • Interview
  • News
  • Resilience Conference London 2026
  • Resilience Conference Copenhagen 2026
  • Resilience Conference Warsaw 2026

© 2026 Resilience Media

This website uses cookies. By continuing to use this website you are giving consent to cookies being used. Visit our Privacy and Cookie Policy.