Buying guide
Hadrian X vs Vulcan in 2026
Comparing 2 humanoid robots across availability, pricing, capabilities, and verified deployments. Current as of 2026.
| Attribute | No image on file | No image on file |
|---|---|---|
| Manufacturer | FBR | ICON |
| Form factor | construction | construction |
| Maturity | pilot | commercial |
| Availability | internal-onlyenterprise | internal-onlyenterprise |
| Price | Not announced | Not announced |
| Capability claims | — | — |
| Brain | — | — |
| Verified deployments | 1FBR | 1ICON |
| Privacy practices | — | — |
| Sources on file | 8 | 8 |
Editorial summaries
Hadrian X
FBR (formerly Fastbrick Robotics; Perth, Australia; ASX: FBR) makes the Hadrian X, a truck-mounted autonomous bricklaying robot whose robotic boom lays blocks and bricks outdoors, using Dynamic Stabilisation Technology to compensate for boom movement in wind and vibration. There is no consumer price: it is B2B construction equipment, not sold to consumers. The verified-vs-claimed point is on maturity: despite years of development, build-partner trials, and announced partnerships with major homebuilders (PulteGroup, CRH), the Hadrian X remains at pilot and trial stage rather than at-scale commercial sale, and FBR has faced documented financial distress and capital-raising pressure as an ASX-listed company. The pilot label reflects verified deployment reality rather than aspirational marketing framing. With Construction Robotics' discontinued SAM100, it forms the bricklaying-automation cautionary pair of the cohort.
Vulcan
ICON (Austin, Texas; about $451M raised) makes the Vulcan, a large-format gantry construction 3D printer that extrudes the company's proprietary Lavacrete to print home wall systems. There is no consumer price: it is B2B construction equipment used by homebuilders, not a product sold to consumers. It is at commercial maturity: its flagship project is the Wolf Ranch community in Georgetown, Texas, a roughly 100-home 3D-printed development built with homebuilder Lennar, and ICON was selected by NASA for Project Olympus, an off-world construction 3D-printing research effort for lunar and Mars habitats. A verified condition worth recording: ICON underwent a 2025 restructuring with reported layoffs of around a quarter of its staff, noted as a factor affecting trajectory (the Vulcan ships and Wolf Ranch is built and occupied, so the line stays commercial/active). It anchors the 3D-printing task type of the construction cohort.
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