It seems like a scene from a futuristic movie, but it has already left the realm of imagination: scientists have tested a system where two autonomous drones work together to build walls, with a flying robot carrying and positioning bricks while another applies adhesive material between the pieces.
The experiment, described in a recent study on aerial masonry with collaborative flying robots, presents an idea that could directly impact one of the most traditional symbols of civil construction: the bricklayer on the scaffold, working at height, brick by brick.
The difference is that, in this case, we are not talking about a terrestrial robot, a concrete 3D printer, or a mechanical arm fixed to the ground. The proposal is much bolder: transforming wall construction into an aerial operation, carried out by coordinated drones, with mission planning, onboard vision, and task division.
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One drone carries the brick, another applies the glue
The system works with two heterogeneous UAVs, that is, two drones with different functions. The first is responsible for transporting, aligning, and positioning the bricks at the correct point on the wall. The second comes into action to apply the adhesive between the pieces, preparing the surface for the next block.
This division is what makes the experiment so striking. Instead of trying to make a single drone perform all the steps, the researchers created a kind of aerial robotic team, where each vehicle has a specific mission within the construction.
In practice, the process mimics part of human work: someone applies the bonding material, someone positions the brick, and the wall takes shape. But here, the “workers” are autonomous flying robots, operating with sensors, cameras, and computational planning.

Could the end of the scaffold begin from the air?
The great impact of this technology is on the most sensitive aspect of civil construction: working at heights. Scaffolding, platforms, ladders, and terrestrial robotic arms still depend on physical reach, stability, and human presence in risk areas.
With drones, the logic changes. A UAV can reach elevated or hard-to-access points without needing to set up a large structure on the ground. This opens up possibilities for future applications in facades, industrial works, dangerous locations, isolated areas, and repairs on structures where human presence would be costly or risky.
It’s not yet the immediate end of bricklayers, but it’s a clear sign that civil construction is entering a new phase: that of automated aerial masonry.
Onboard vision helps the drone find the brick

For the drone to pick up and position the bricks, the system uses embedded computer vision. Researchers applied visual markers on the blocks, allowing the UAV’s camera to detect the position and orientation of each piece.
With this, the drone does not rely solely on approximate coordinates. It can correct the alignment before picking up the brick and also during the positioning stage. This detail is essential because building a wall requires much more precision than simply transporting an object from one point to another.
The study also describes the use of coupling and control mechanisms to reduce errors during handling. In other words, the drone doesn’t just fly with the brick: it needs to see, calculate, adjust, and release the piece in the right place.
Glue replaces traditional mortar in the experiment

Another important point is the material used in the demonstration. Instead of traditional heavy mortar, the system uses a light adhesive, more compatible with the drones’ load capacity.
This makes sense because, for a UAV, every gram matters. A very heavy material would reduce autonomy, stability, and safety. Therefore, choosing a lighter adhesive allows the applicator drone to perform its task without compromising the flight.
Even so, this detail shows that the technology is still in the experimental phase. To reach real construction sites, it will be necessary to evaluate structural resistance, durability, technical standards, safety, cost, and performance in outdoor environments, with wind, dust, and obstacles.
It’s not a ready house, but it’s a warning to the sector
It’s important not to exaggerate: drones are not yet building complete buildings on their own. The experiment was controlled, planned, and validated in a research environment. But what draws attention is the path it points to.
The construction industry has already seen bricklayer robots on the ground, 3D concrete printers, and machines capable of raising walls with little human intervention. Now, a new front emerges: autonomous drones doing masonry in the air, without relying on traditional scaffolding and with two vehicles working in a coordinated manner.
This is the kind of advancement that doesn’t replace a profession overnight but completely changes the conversation about the future of the construction site. The bricklayer may continue to exist, but the heavy, repetitive, and dangerous work at heights tends to be increasingly contested by machines.
The construction industry has just gained wings
The strongest point of this study is the image it creates: a wall being raised by flying robots, with one drone carrying the brick and another applying the glue. It’s simple to understand, visually powerful, and directly linked to the fear and curiosity about the future of professions.
If technologies like this advance, the question is no longer just “will robots replace bricklayers?” and becomes even more provocative: could even the scaffolding become unnecessary in some parts of construction?
For now, the answer is still in the laboratory. But the message has already been given: the next revolution in civil construction may not come from the ground. It may come from the sky, with autonomous drones transforming bricks, glue, and algorithms into walls built in the air.

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