Publication | Construction Robotics 2020

Highly accessible platform technologies for vision‑guided, closed‑loop robotic assembly of unitized enclosure systems

This paper documents work to create a flexible workflow for industrialized robots to assemble unitized construction panels. It describes a closed-loop robotic control system using an eye-in-hand depth camera to identify and pick up a variety of construction materials in the workspace.

Download publication

Abstract

Highly accessible platform technologies for vision‑guided, closed‑loop robotic assembly of unitized enclosure systems

Daniel Tish, Nathan King, Nicholas Cote

Construction Robotics 2020

Equipping robotics with the capacity to make decisions based on real-time information about their physical environment is crucial to the success of in situ robotics and offers many process advantages in prefabrication scenarios as well. However, the perceived technical challenges of producing environmentally-aware closed-loop robotics have limited their use in construction and design applications. To address this challenge, a low-cost and largely open-source computer vision-guided closed-loop robotic control paradigm is developed. The system is used here to identify construction materials in the workspace and calculate their position in space and determine their place in the facade panel assembly. The industrial robot arm is equipped with an RGB-depth camera in an eye-in-hand configuration to give control over the positioning of the camera for greatest accuracy. The control system relies on a simple TCP client/server connection between the robot and a central control computer to pass information and instructions from the computer vision system to the robot and vice versa. This setup delivers process flexibility, enabling pick-and-place procedures of the material positioned randomly within the workspace. In this work, the technologies are deployed in a factory-type setting but would also be necessary for any on-site robotic construction system, building towards an on-site robotics future. The final product of this research is a unitized spandrel panel wherein the vision-guided robot finds and places the insulation, cement board, and masonry cladding materials.

Related Resources

Publication

2010

ToolClips: An investigation of contextual video assistance for functionality understanding

We investigate the use of on-line contextual video assistance to…

Publication

2022

A force-mediated controller for cooperative object manipulation with independent autonomous robots

We consider cooperative manipulation by multiple robots assisting a…

Publication

2016

Crowdsourced Fabrication

In recent years, extensive research in the HCI literature has explored…

Publication

2013

Simulating the Sensing of Building Occupancy

Accurate building occupancy information can be beneficial in…

Get in touch

Something pique your interest? Get in touch if you’d like to learn more about Autodesk Research, our projects, people, and potential collaboration opportunities.

Contact us