TerraFirma’s semi-autonomous construction equipment
Provided by: Terrafirma
as space xElon Musk is pitching investors on a space economy with extraterrestrial life, and a two-year-old construction startup founded by two former Musk engineers is poised for a future of interplanetary infrastructure.
Terrafirma announced Tuesday that it has raised $115 million in a funding round with investments from Kleiner Perkins, Bain Capital Ventures, and angel investors tied to defense technology companies SpaceX, Anduril, and Hadrian.
The Austin-based company uses a combination of interfaces such as Xbox controllers to remotely control construction equipment, and says its tools reduce costs and improve safety. In the long term, the company hopes to build on Mars.
“Infrastructure is the bottleneck for basically every industry that needs to innovate for decades to come,” CEO and co-founder Noah Chochet told CNBC. “There is a huge lack of people who are taking all the great technology that has existed and been built over the past few decades and bringing it to the construction industry.”
The company plans to use the funding to hire 300 people over the next year and build both its Texas factory and mission control center.
TerraFirma is part of a growing network of startups spun out of SpaceX that are looking to capitalize on the emerging space economy. Other notable startups from former SpaceX alumni include hypersonic weapons maker Castelion and Relativity Space.
SpaceX’s historic $86 billion IPO last month, coupled with NASA’s push to build a moon base, sparked new optimism in the sector.
Over time, this future could include moving industry to Mars or the moon to build solar cells and more easily launching data centers in space.
Schott and Noah McGuinness, the company’s founders, met on the first day of an engineering class at Princeton University about 10 years ago. For the next four years, they both endured similar course loads and worked on all kinds of projects.
After graduating, both founders joined SpaceX. McGuinness worked on the government’s satellite program known as Starshield, while Chochet worked on Starlink and later Starship.
During their stay, the team was under constant pressure to build and scale quickly, sometimes working in difficult conditions and facing infrastructure issues such as reliable toilets.
At the same time, the construction industry was working at a snail’s pace, so the idea was born to bring the speed of SpaceX construction to the construction industry.
“We’re building rockets the size of skyscrapers at a rate of one a month, but all the processes to automate mass production aren’t showing up on the construction site,” Chauchet said.
TerraFirma technicians use Xbox controllers to remotely control heavy machinery
Provided by: Terrafirma
Looking back, the two described the experience as “difficult” both physically and mentally, and said they spent days sleeping at their desks.
“It was worth it,” Schochet said. “We were studying at a ridiculous pace.”
About half of the company’s engineering team previously worked for SpaceX. tesla Or the Boring Company.
For now, TerraFirma is working on proving its technology on Earth with recent commercial projects such as a sports arena and a Starbucks.
But the company hasn’t lost sight of its long-term goals and plans to bid on future moon projects.
“The problem is, we don’t want to build a community based on a space economy that doesn’t exist yet,” Chochet said. “We want to build around the economic engines that truly drive the world today.”

