Boston Dynamics, the robotics subsidiary of Hyundai Motor Group (005380.KS), announced on June 25 a USD 100 million investment to build a 323,000-square-foot advanced robotics and artificial intelligence center in Waltham, Massachusetts — a capital commitment that underscores Hyundai's industrial automation ambitions as the conglomerate prepares to deploy up to 25,000 Atlas humanoid robots across its global factory network.
Facility and State Support
The new campus at 1601 Trapelo Road will consolidate Boston Dynamics' operations currently spread across three nearby sites. Massachusetts awarded the company a USD 25 million Economic Development Incentive Program (EDIP) grant, bringing total project funding to USD 125 million. Renovation is already under way, with phased employee move-ins slated to begin in mid-2027.
"Boston Dynamics has called Waltham home for many years, and this expansion is a reflection of how fast our industry is moving," said Amanda McMaster, Interim Chief Executive Officer of Boston Dynamics.
The facility will integrate manufacturing, workforce training and research and development under a single roof, supporting all three of the company's robot platforms: Atlas, Spot and Stretch.
Jobs and Hiring Timeline
Boston Dynamics expects to create 1,250 new jobs by 2033, more than doubling its current local headcount. The roles will span advanced manufacturing engineering, software development and robotics operations. Massachusetts Governor Maura Healey framed the expansion as part of the state's push to anchor the emerging humanoid robotics industry domestically.
Atlas at the Center: 25,000 Units for Hyundai Factories
While Spot and Stretch are proven revenue-generating products, Atlas — Boston Dynamics' fully electric humanoid robot — is the strategic cornerstone of the Waltham expansion. Hyundai has signalled plans to deploy approximately 25,000 Atlas units across its manufacturing plants globally from 2028, targeting a per-unit price below USD 320,000 — roughly equivalent to two years of US factory payroll, a threshold the company believes will clear the return-on-investment bar for industrial adoption.
Atlas is being positioned primarily for factory automation, not consumer applications, reflecting Hyundai's view that industrial deployment offers the clearest near-term route to commercial viability for full-size humanoid robots.
Context: Hyundai Becomes Sole Owner
The Waltham announcement follows Hyundai Motor Group's completion on June 21 of a USD 325 million acquisition of SoftBank's remaining 9.65% stake in Boston Dynamics, making Hyundai the company's sole owner. The full-ownership structure removes any governance friction over capital allocation decisions of this scale.
Korea Market Implications
For investors, the USD 100M Waltham investment signals that Hyundai is accelerating its robotics capex cycle. HL Mando (204320.KS), which supplies actuators for Boston Dynamics robots, and Hyundai Motor (005380.KS) are the primary listed proxies for Atlas's commercial trajectory. The 2028 deployment timeline gives investors roughly two years to assess ramp execution risk.
Sources: Boston Dynamics Press Release (Jun 25, 2026); KED Global (Jun 25, 2026); NBC Boston (Jun 24, 2026); Boston Globe (Jun 24, 2026)



