Bedrock Robotics Raises $270M Series B for Autonomous Construction
Bedrock Robotics raises $270M Series B led by CapitalG and Valor Atreides to scale autonomous construction technology for 24/7 operations.
Bedrock Robotics secured $270 million in Series B funding co-led by CapitalG and Valor Atreides AI Fund to scale its autonomous construction technology. The two-year-old company builds machines that operate 24/7 to accelerate construction timelines.
Bedrock Robotics announced a $270 million Series B funding round on February 4, 2026, co-led by CapitalG (Alphabet’s growth fund) and Valor Atreides AI Fund. The round included participation from Xora, 8VC, Eclipse, Emergence Capital, Perry Creek Capital, NVentures, and real estate developer Tishman Speyer.
The funding represents significant growth for the construction robotics startup, which previously raised $80 million across seed and Series A rounds. Founded just two years ago, Bedrock develops autonomous machines designed to operate continuously around the clock to speed construction timelines.
Bedrock’s technology targets three key construction sectors: housing, data centers, and manufacturing facilities. The company’s machines are engineered for 24-hour operation, addressing the construction industry’s longstanding challenges with project delays and labor shortages.
The investor lineup signals strong confidence in construction automation. CapitalG’s participation connects Bedrock to Alphabet’s broader AI and robotics ecosystem, while NVentures brings Nvidia’s expertise in AI computing platforms. Tishman Speyer’s involvement as both investor and potential customer provides direct access to large-scale real estate development projects.
The construction robotics market has attracted significant venture investment as the industry grapples with a skilled labor shortage and pressure to accelerate project timelines. Data centers, in particular, represent a high-growth opportunity as cloud computing and AI infrastructure demands surge.
Bedrock’s rapid fundraising trajectory—from startup to $270 million Series B in two years—reflects investor appetite for construction automation solutions. The company joins a growing field of robotics startups targeting the construction market, though few have achieved the scale of funding Bedrock has secured.
The fresh capital will likely fund expanded manufacturing capabilities, additional pilot deployments, and scaling the engineering team to refine autonomous construction systems. With major tech investors backing the company, Bedrock appears positioned to accelerate adoption of robotic construction technology across multiple sectors.