Gecko Robotics wins $71m deal to provide US Pacific Fleet with wall-climbing, flying robots

Gecko Robotics has landed a $71 million contract to deploy ‌wall-climbing robots and artificial intelligence across U.S. Navy ‌ships in the Pacific Fleet, the Pittsburgh-based company said, in what ​executives described as a first-of-its-kind maintenance contract awarded to a robotics firm.

Gecko’s robots climb hulls, crawl through ballast tanks and fly through confined spaces, collecting structural ‌and material data ⁠that feeds the company’s AI-powered software platform, called Cantilever.

The system can identify repairs up ⁠to 50 times faster and more accurately than manual inspections, according to the privately-held company. In one documented ​case, a ​single robotic evaluation of ​a flight deck eliminated ‌more than three months of potential maintenance delays, the company said.

The deal represents a significant scaling of robotic technology.

Gecko currently operates a fleet of roughly 250 robots across both commercial and government customers, and ‌plans to build 50 to 60 ​more this year.

The five-year indefinite-delivery, ​indefinite-quantity contract, awarded ​through the U.S. Navy and General ‌Services Administration, will see Gecko ​begin work on ​18 ships across the Pacific Fleet, with an initial award worth up to $54 million. Destroyers, amphibious ​warships and ‌littoral combat ships are among the vessels included ​in the program.

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