DEPLOY

Buying guide

Exosystem vs Canvas drywall-finishing robot in 2026

Comparing 2 humanoid robots across availability, pricing, capabilities, and verified deployments. Current as of 2026.

Attribute
ManufacturerBuilt RoboticsCanvas
Form factorconstructionconstruction
Maturitycommercialcommercial
Availabilityinternal-onlyenterpriseinternal-onlyenterprise
PriceNot announcedNot announced
Capability claims
Brain
Verified deployments1United States0
Privacy practices
Sources on file87

Editorial summaries

Exosystem

Built Robotics builds construction autonomy. The Exosystem is an autonomy kit that retrofits standard excavators for autonomous earthmoving and trenching, and the RPD 35 is a robotic solar pile driver that installs utility-scale solar piles several times faster than manual crews. It is enterprise B2B equipment sold to contractors, not a consumer product, so there is no consumer price. Built has raised funding for the Exosystem (about $64M per trade press). The registry has no structured deployment records yet; commercial use is documented via the model's sources.

Canvas drywall-finishing robot

Canvas (San Francisco; founder and CEO Kevin Albert, formerly of Boston Dynamics; about $43M-plus raised) makes a drywall-finishing robot: a Universal Robots UR10e collaborative arm mounted on a mobile base that applies and sands drywall compound to a finished wall surface, operated by a trained union carpenter. There is no consumer price: it is B2B construction equipment, not sold to consumers. It is at commercial maturity, deployed on commercial construction projects in the San Francisco Bay Area. A verified-vs-claimed correction worth recording: Canvas was acquired by JLG Industries (an Oshkosh Corporation company) around January 2026, in a core-technology and asset acquisition with undisclosed terms; some framings that attribute the acquisition to Dusty Robotics are incorrect, as independent research confirms the acquirer is JLG/Oshkosh and the two companies are unrelated. Operations continue under JLG/Oshkosh, so the line is active. It anchors the cobot-assisted finishing task type (a human carpenter operates it).


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