UAS Additive Strategies 2026
AMS X

3D Printing Robots Receive €1 Million Boost

AMR Applications Analysis

Share this Article

Like any good buzzwordy phrase, “Industry 4.0” has its high and low points. An example of a low point, for instance, would be that it’s a subtle way of presenting our dystopian future as an exciting new idea, rather than simply the inevitable working out of market dynamics. Contrarily, what is perhaps its highest point is that it instantly suggests the inextricable relationship between the trajectories of what could otherwise seem like very distinct economic trends.

A French-Swedish startup, for instance, ADAXIS (founded in 2021), is predicated entirely on developing a software platform that recognizes the necessarily overlapping objectives between three of the sectors most closely associated with the phrase “Industry 4.0”: artificial intelligence (AI), additive manufacturing (AM), and robotics. Earlier this week, ADAXIS announced that its software platform, currently in development and called AdaOne, has just received over €1 million in its first, pre-seed round of funding. Capital came from Newfund NAEH, an investment fund for French and American tech startups; France-based SkalePark, which focuses on funding startups at the seed phase and takes a particularly hands-on approach to its investments; and EIT Manufacturing, a division of the European Institute of Innovation and Technology (an EU organization). ADAXIS also received money from French regional grants.

Comprised of just four individuals — all engineers — the team at ADAXIS first met while they were working together on an EU co-funded collaborative research project. Moreover, they’ve all spent the last five years working on applied research into the use of industrial robotics for AM, at ESTIA (France’s Institute of Advanced Industrial Technologies) and RISE, a Swedish state-owned research institute. The purpose of AdaOne is to use algorithms to accelerate and simplify the process of transforming industrial robotic arms into giant 3D printers.

In ADAXIS’s press statement on closing this first round of funding, the founder of Newfund NAEH, Agathe Descamps, explained, “ADAXIS allows us to contribute concretely to Industry 4.0 by marketing reliable and operational tools. ADAXIS has taken on the challenge of providing software that makes manufacturing industries more efficient and competitive. We were impressed by the technological maturity of their product, and we are very happy to help this young company seize the opportunity that the development of this market represents.”

Other promising facets of the AdaOne software include that it’s intended to work with metal, plastics, composites, and concrete — meaning that there’s a rather limitless variety of projects it could be used for; and that it’s being designed not just for manufacturing, but also for on-demand repairs.

Reading about the company’s earliest round of funding immediately brought to mind a comment made to GeekWire a few weeks ago by Relativity Space CEO, Tim Ellis, when he was explaining the company’s hire of former Microsoft executive, Scott Van Vliet: “…I very much do believe the quote from Andreesen-Horowitz that ‘software is eating the world.’…Everything that Relativity is doing, transitioning manufacturing to more software- and data-driven approaches, is inevitable. We’re just the farthest along.”

Also relevant is this highly astute point recently made by 3DPrint’s Joris Peels: “Software is moving into the driving seat as the competition heats up.” The more aspects of Industry 4.0 a company is attempting to integrate, the more software will continue moving into the driver’s seat.



Share this Article


Recent News

Artemis II Returned & The Economics of Getting to Space

Semicap Insurrection Revisited: APES Demonstrates Matrix6D Live at RAPID + TCT



Categories

3D Design

3D Printed Art

3D Printed Food

3D Printed Guns


You May Also Like

Rice Researchers Use Microwaves to 3D Print Electronics

Rice University researchers have found a way to 3D print using focused microwaves. Published in Science Advances, Professor Yong Lin Kong and his team believe the technology could be used...

RAPID Roundup 2026: New Machines and Market Moves

RAPID + TCT 2026 wrapped up yesterday, but the show floor proved there’s a lot happening across the additive manufacturing (AM) space, especially when it comes to new hardware and...

Featured

RAPID Roundup 2026: Simulation, IPQA, Materials, Depowdering, & More

This year’s RAPID+TCT trade show is in full swing in Boston this week, and we already have plenty of news to share with you, from a simulation and optimization platform...

Featured

HP Continues to Lower Barriers to Adoption with Compact MJF 1200 & Other RAPID + TCT Announcements

This week at RAPID+TCT in Boston, HP Additive Manufacturing Solutions is celebrating ten years in the AM market. The company launched its Multi Jet Fusion 3D printing technology in Barcelona...