flexiblefullpage
billboard
interstitial1
catfish1
Currently Reading

Investor interest in the built environment not quite as avid in 2019

AEC Tech

Investor interest in the built environment not quite as avid in 2019

Builtworlds’ annual list of venture deals led by workspace providers.


By John Caulfield, Senior Editor | February 22, 2020
Knotel's Boston location. Knotel, which provides flexible workplace solutions, bagged the biggest deal with ConTech investors in 2019

An inside look at Knotel's Boston location. Knotel, which provides flexible workplace solutions, bagged the biggest deal with ConTech investors in 2019. Image: Knotel

    

The top 50 venture capital investments in Built Industry Technology totaled just under $1 billion in 2019, about one-tenth of the top 50 deals the previous year.

That’s according to Builtworlds’ latest ranking of seed and early-stage investments in ConTech and real estate enterprises. While there were no blockbuster deals like SoftBank’s $865 million investment in Katerra in 2018, investors haven’t stopped looking for that idea or product that will move the industry’s dial forward.

In 2019, the top 50 venture deals totaled $967.8 million, compared to just under $10 billion that were raised in the top 50 deals in 2018. The latest ranking includes several familiar ConTech names such as Blokable, Rhumbix, Dvele, eSUB Construction Software, ALICE Technologies, and IrisVR. (The full list of deals can be viewed at http://bit.ly/2SPiMwD.)

Ironically, in a year marked by WeWork’s failed initial public offering, investors still showed interest in workplace solutions. Two companies that specialize in offering customized flexible workspaces captured the top two deals on Builtworld’s list.

The top 50 Contech investment deals were with companies that, for the most part, are beyond the startup phase. Chart: Builtworlds

 

New York-based Knotel, which actively pitches itself as a steadier alternative to WeWork, last summer raised $400 million through a Series C funding round from an investment group that included Kuwait-based Wafra Inc., and Japan-based Mori Trust, Itochu Corp., and Mercuria Investments. The fundraising was in exchange for 15% to 30% of the closely held company, and increased Knotel’s valuation to at least $1.3 billion, according to Bloomberg (https://bloom.bg/39XmYjS).

Knotel recently topped 5 million sf in global workspace, according to Yahoo! Finance (https://yhoo.it/2VfkTf0). It differs from WeWork in that it doesn’t do coworking: its clients include corporations ranging from Starbucks to AT&T. It also does a mix of direct leases and revenue share deals.

Knotel was followed on Builtworlds’ ranking by Industrious, another workspace company with more than 95 locations across 45 U.S. cities offering turnkey spec suites, private offices, and community memberships that can be bought on a month-to-month basis. Last August, Industrious announced it had raised $80 million in Series D financing from investors that included Wells Fargo Strategic Capital, TF Cornerstone, Riverwood Capital, Granite Properties, Equinox Fitness, Canada Pension Plan, Fifth Wall, and Brookfield Properties Retail. In this latest round, Industrious raised over $220 million.

Industrious last year redirected its business model toward revenue-sharing deals with landlords. Its CEO Jamie Hodari told Reuters (https://reut.rs/2PekzJm) that the company expects to be profitable in 2020.   

No. 3 on Builtworlds’ ranking was Congreux, founded in 2017, a national provider of design, engineering, construction management and maintenance services to broadband service providers. Last July, Congruex completed its sixth acquisition with the purchase of HHS Construction, which offers infrastructure services to telecommunications and cable providers, mostly in Southern California. Last August, Congruex disclosed that it had raised $48.9 million in private equity financing from an investor group led by Crestview Partners, which has had a strategic alliance with Congruex for the past three years.

Next on Builtworlds’ list is Fieldwire, which last September said it had raised $33.5 million in Series C financing from investors that included Menlo Park Ventures, Peak State Ventures, Formation 8, Hilti Group, and Brick & Mortar Ventures. Founded in 2013, Fieldwire claims to power over 750,000 jobsites worldwide with cloud-based jobsite management software accessible by construction teams through a app. It told Tech Crunch last September (https://tcrn.ch/2vaKb30) that it had 2,000 paying customers (including Clark Construction Group, which last year rolled out Fieldwire companywide to manage project documents), and was starting to make inroads into Europe.

 

Built Robotics is ready to introduce the first fully autonomous construction equipment. Image credit: Built Robotics

 

Rounding out Builtworlds’ top 5 venture deals is Built Robotics, which on September 16 announced it had raised $33 million in Series B funding from investors led by Next47 and including Presidio Ventures, New Enterprise Associates, Lemnos VC, Founders Fund, and Building Ventures.

Built Robotics, founded in 2016, is dedicated to construction automation. BD+C reported last year that Built Robotics had formed a partnership with Mortenson to develop a suite of autonomous equipment. Next month, Built Robotics will exhibit at the CONEXPO-CON/AGG construction trade show in Las Vegas, where the company plans to unveil what it’s calling the first commercially deployed autonomous construction equipment. Show attendees will be able to operate a Built robot located in Houston to perform such tasks as digging trenches or grading building pads. Built Robotics asserts that its AI guidance system can be installed onto existing equipment from any manufacturer.

Related Stories

AEC Tech | Jul 29, 2019

2019 Bluebeam Extreme Conference: Peer-to-Peer Learning at Scale

XCON 2019 to focus on collaborative partnerships and what works in digital construction

Multifamily Housing | Jul 23, 2019

Is prefab in your future?

The most important benefit of offsite construction, when done right, is reliability.

AEC Tech | Jul 15, 2019

Lack of standards hampers development of exoskeleton industry

Guidelines, common terminology, and testing methodology are needed, says expert. 

AEC Tech | Jul 15, 2019

Investors eye startups focused on automating construction

Investors could reap big payoffs in an industry that experts say is ready for automation.

AEC Tech | Jul 12, 2019

A new Dodge-Viewpoint report gauges how well contractors gather and use jobsite data

Information is power, but are contractors collecting what they need to make better decisions?

| Jul 11, 2019

Pepper Construction is using 3D models to help identify underground utilities on jobsites

Overlaying new installs and site surveys add precision to the construction process.

AEC Tech | Jul 10, 2019

Blue Collar Labs launches Builder’s Almanac, an online construction technology evaluation platform

The free online resource aims to eliminate subjective bias from the contech software evaluation process. 

AEC Tech | Jul 2, 2019

Living in a cloud: What nanotech means for architecture and the built environment

Could there come a time when buildings will become less about bricks and mortar and feel more like mists or fogs?

AEC Tech | Jun 28, 2019

In London, Autodesk homes in on construction management

The software goliath sounds the alarm about the urgent need for productivity improvements to address unbridled urbanization.

Giants 400 | Jun 26, 2019

How are the AEC Giants faring in the tech arms race?

About half (42%) say their firm is “on par” with their most-direct AEC competitors.

boombox1
boombox2
native1

More In Category


3D Printing

3D-printed construction milestones take shape in Tennessee and Texas

Two notable 3D-printed projects mark milestones in the new construction technique of “printing” structures with specialized concrete. In Athens, Tennessee, Walmart hired Alquist 3D to build a 20-foot-high store expansion, one of the largest freestanding 3D-printed commercial concrete structures in the U.S. In Marfa, Texas, the world’s first 3D-printed hotel is under construction at an existing hotel and campground site.



halfpage1

Most Popular Content

  1. 2021 Giants 400 Report
  2. Top 150 Architecture Firms for 2019
  3. 13 projects that represent the future of affordable housing
  4. Sagrada Familia completion date pushed back due to coronavirus
  5. Top 160 Architecture Firms 2021