Boston Dynamics is a pioneer in dynamic robotics, best known for its agile legged robots Spot, Stretch and the Atlas humanoid research platform. Spun out of MIT and now part of Hyundai Motor Group, the company builds mobile robots that can climb stairs, traverse rough terrain and automate routine inspection work in complex environments. Spot combines robust perception sensors with onboard autonomy so the robot can map facilities, follow repeatable routes and capture high‑quality data with minimal human supervision. Through GraphNav, Missions and a rich SDK, developers integrate Spot into inspection workflows, SCADA systems and digital‑twin platforms, and mount payloads such as 360° cameras, LiDAR, thermal imagers and gas detectors. Stretch brings the same focus on mobility and intelligence to warehouse palletizing and depalletizing, helping logistics operations increase throughput without rebuilding their infrastructure. By combining highly capable hardware, AI‑powered navigation and a fast‑growing partner ecosystem, Boston Dynamics makes legged robots practical tools for real‑world inspection, sensing and automation projects.
Boston Dynamics builds highly mobile legged robots such as the quadruped Spot, the warehouse box‑handling robot Stretch and the Atlas humanoid R&D platform.
Spot is widely used for autonomous inspection, 3D mapping and data collection on construction sites, in factories, utilities, mining operations and other complex facilities.
Yes. With onboard perception plus GraphNav and Missions, Spot can follow saved routes, avoid obstacles and dock itself for charging with minimal supervision.
Energy and utilities, manufacturing, construction, logistics, public safety organizations and research labs use Boston Dynamics robots to automate inspection and sensing tasks.
The company exposes rich APIs and SDKs so developers can integrate Spot with custom software, cloud services and digital‑twin systems.
Spot supports standard payload interfaces and power so integrators can mount cameras, LiDAR, gas detectors and other specialized sensors.
The robots include safety functions, speed limits and remote‑operation tools, and Boston Dynamics provides best‑practice guidelines for operating near people.
Boston Dynamics and its partners offer site assessments, pilot projects, operator training and ongoing support and maintenance programs.