Construction Brothers
Automated Nail Pulling (feat. Eric Law)

Millions of tons of lumber goes to landfills every year. Eric Law is out to change that. Eric and his team at Urban Machine have designed a machine that automates the removal of nails and screws from reclaimed lumber, making that lumber usable again. Eric explains how he settled into this niche. He spent 20 years working in various parts of the technology and construction industries. He was leading a sustainability initiative when he noticed that steel and concrete get recycled but the lumber was all going to the landfill. What kept it from being reused or recycled? Well. It was the nails, of course. He approached Andrew Gillies and Alex Thiele about using automated robots and computer vision to address this problem. The three of them decided this was a solution worth pursuing, and they launched Urban Machine. Here’s the process:
- Humans take out the big, ugly fasteners.
- They polish up the remaining fasteners to help the machine spot them.
- A device resembling a bird beak removes those remaining fasteners.
- The piece goes through a metal detector to ensure that the piece is clean.
- Broadcast on:
- 08 Feb 2023
Millions of tons of lumber goes to landfills every year. Eric Law is out to change that. Eric and his team at Urban Machine have designed a machine that automates the removal of nails and screws from reclaimed lumber, making that lumber usable again. Eric explains how he settled into this niche. He spent 20 years working in various parts of the technology and construction industries. He was leading a sustainability initiative when he noticed that steel and concrete get recycled but the lumber was all going to the landfill. What kept it from being reused or recycled? Well. It was the nails, of course. He approached Andrew Gillies and Alex Thiele about using automated robots and computer vision to address this problem. The three of them decided this was a solution worth pursuing, and they launched Urban Machine. Here’s the process:
- Humans take out the big, ugly fasteners.
- They polish up the remaining fasteners to help the machine spot them.
- A device resembling a bird beak removes those remaining fasteners.
- The piece goes through a metal detector to ensure that the piece is clean.