Full-Time

Construction Integration Engineer

Design for Manufacturing and Assembly, Offsite Modular Construction

Reframe Systems

Reframe Systems

51-200 employees

Modular, robotic construction of homes

No salary listed

No H1B Sponsorship

Andover, MA, USA

In Person

On-site role in Andover, MA. US work authorization required; visa sponsorship not provided.

Category
Process Engineering
Required Skills
CAD
Six Sigma
process engineering
Graphic Design
Data Analysis
Requirements
  • Bachelor’s degree in a technical field or equivalent hands-on experience.
  • Deep background in construction, cabinet-making, woodworking, or a related trade.
  • Proven experience applying DFMA principles to improve product design and assembly processes.
  • Experience in a manufacturing, process engineering, or integration engineering role within a construction or manufacturing environment.
  • Expertise in manual assembly processes, including developing and optimizing work instructions and workflows.
  • Familiarity with lean manufacturing principles and methodologies such as 5S, Six Sigma, or Kaizen.
  • Strong problem-solving, collaboration, and communication skills.
  • Passion for sustainable building, housing affordability, and an interest in advanced manufacturing technologies.
  • At this time, we are only considering candidates who are authorized to work in the U.S. without the need for current or future visa sponsorship.
Responsibilities
  • Champion and implement Design for Manufacturing and Assembly (DFMA) principles across the organization. Collaborate deeply with design and engineering teams to provide critical, hands-on feedback that ensures all components and systems are optimized for factory production.
  • Translate digital building models (BIM/CAD) and design intent into integrated work packages and detailed assembly sequences for the factory floor (our Process Definition Table, PDT), enabling efficient and repeatable production.
  • Develop and deploy highly visual, operator-centric work instructions and standard operating procedures (SOPs) for a range of manual and semi-automated tasks, leveraging graphic design where needed.
  • Lead hands-on process trials and prototyping on the shop-floor. Experiment with and iteratively improve assembly workflows, custom jigs, and workcell layouts to increase throughput, quality, and safety.
  • Define the requirements for fabrication-level shop drawings and coordinate with the modeling/design engineering team to ensure digital assets translate seamlessly to the physical build environment.
  • Collect, organize, and analyze production data to identify bottlenecks, reduce waste, and drive continuous improvement in throughput, cost, quality, and operator experience.
  • Establish and maintain robust process documentation and create feedback loops that ensure knowledge and improvements flow fluidly between the factory floor, engineering, and our software systems.
  • Stay current with industry best practices in offsite modular construction, DFMA, lean manufacturing, and building science.

Reframe Systems builds missing-middle housing with modular, panelized walls made in small, local microfactories to deliver turnkey homes such as ADUs, duplexes, and triplexes. Its microfactories use proprietary software, physical AI, and vision-guided robotics to automate framing and sheathing, producing pre-wired and plumbed panels that snap together on site to speed construction and fit local regulations. The approach combines design, engineering, construction, and site work in a vertically integrated model and uses a co-developer/builder setup that activates a factory only after securing a project pipeline, with units eligible for public subsidies or open-market pricing. The company aims to scale to one million housing units over the next 20 years to reduce construction emissions and increase affordable, climate-resilient homes.

Company Size

51-200

Company Stage

Series A

Total Funding

$20M

Headquarters

Somerville, Massachusetts

Founded

2021

Simplify Jobs

Simplify's Take

What believers are saying

  • Q3 2026 Boston microfactory produces 250 homes yearly at 500,000 sq ft.
  • 48 units deliver in 2026, scaling to 200 in 2027 across New England.
  • $20M Series A funds Vancouver JV and California pilots in high-cost markets.

What critics are saying

  • Icon's Vulcan printers capture Texas and Florida contracts, outpacing panels.
  • California AB 2221 delays Altadena projects by 6+ months due to permitting backlog.
  • Lack of UL 723 certification excludes Reframe from FEMA disaster-relief contracts.

What makes Reframe Systems unique

  • Microfactories deploy in 100 days for $5 million, enabling localized production.
  • Physical AI enables mass customization for local zoning and aesthetics.
  • Panelized walls with pre-installed systems snap together on-site rapidly.

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Benefits

Paid Vacation

Paid Sick Leave

Company News

Libertas Real Estate
Apr 6th, 2026
A capital-light, local model could power this off-site builder's plan to scale.

A capital-light, local model could power this off-site builder's plan to scale. by tyler williams april 06, 2026 01:44 PM. While numerous firms in the residential off-site construction space push the limits of innovation, one company is distinguishing itself through a deeply localized approach to expansion across North America. Massachusetts-based Reframe Systems is betting that its microfactory concept, which relies on relatively small facilities in different markets, can deliver housing more efficiently. These microfactories can be operational within a few months and at a fraction of the cost of a traditional factory. Using this approach, the company says it can construct housing quickly and react to demand with agility. Founded in 2022 by former Amazon Robotics executives, Reframe Systems is close to completing its first full-scale microfactory in Massachusetts. Building on that momentum, executives are also in talks to bring their innovative building concept to markets across the country. The journey from Amazon to Reframe Systems. Before co-founding Reframe Systems in 2022 with Aaron Small, Head of Operations, and Felipe Polido, Head of Tech, CEO Vikas Enti worked at Amazon Robotics for more than a decade, alongside his cofounders. While there, he and his team developed mobile robots and software to make Amazon's warehousing and e-commerce operations more efficient. Towards the end of his time at Amazon, Enti's work aided Amazon's shift away from relying solely on huge one-million-square-foot fulfillment centers to a hybrid strategy that also utilizes micro facilities. That experience, Enti explained, laid the groundwork for Reframe System's innovative microfactory concept. "My team jokes that I went from shipping small boxes to shipping big boxes," Enti joked. The microfactory concept. Reframe Systems currently has a prototype-scale, 16,000-square-foot facility in Massachusetts, but its first full-scale microfactory facility in the Boston area is set to deliver during Q3 of this year. The typical microfactory will be roughly 50,000 to 65,000 square feet, about equivalent to the size of a garden center at The Home Depot. A facility of that size can produce up to about 250 single-family homes or roughly 500,000 square feet per year using modular and panelized construction methods. In the future, Reframe Systems envisions microfactories in markets across the country, rather than a single large centralized facility. This strategy allows for a localized approach, with factories within about an hour of most job sites, thereby reducing logistical bottlenecks and shipping costs. One of the main benefits of the microfactory concept is that it can be operational quickly and at a relatively low upfront capital cost. According to Enti, the microfactory under construction in Massachusetts will cost about $5 million in equipment, far less than many competing factories of a similar size. Cost savings come from replacing complex, expensive automation with streamlined robotic systems powered by machine vision and simple material flows. It also simplifies operations with vertical panel handling and modular workflows that require less space, equipment and capital investment. Because the microfactory relies on compact, decoupled robotic work cells rather than massive conveyor-based setups, the facility can also be deployed and scaled much faster than traditional facilities. The microfactory can be operational in about 100 days, allowing Reframe Systems to react quickly to demand in new markets. For now, the Reframe Systems factory automates about 20% of the construction process, but the company sees a path to automating about 65% of tasks in the near future. Today, robots autonomously frame and assemble panels that serve as the building blocks of each module, with all internal systems installed and finished on-site at the factory. Reframe Systems' growth trajectory. Reframe Systems has built eight housing units in total. Most are in Massachusetts, but two are on their way to the Los Angeles area as part of the Altadena rebuild. Those units, a bungalow and an ADU, will be set on site later this month. The company delivered its first home in 2024 and completed seven units in 2025. This year, Reframe Systems expects to deliver a total of 48 units, mostly in the Boston area. That includes a 12-unit single-family development and a five-story multifamily building that is set to break ground by Q4. If all goes according to plan, the company could deliver about 200 units next year, primarily in New England, utilizing the new factory. The pilot program in California is ongoing, and the team is in discussions for a pair of other potential pilot programs elsewhere. Ultimately, the idea is to have microfactories in various markets throughout North America. Over the next several years, the company's focus will be on markets where the cost of construction exceeds $300 per square foot. To that end, there's been quite a bit of interest in areas on the coasts, as well as certain pockets in Colorado and Utah. This interest has already translated into action, as Reframe Systems just signed its first joint venture agreement with a developer in Vancouver, British Columbia. There aren't yet exact timelines for when facilities in Vancouver or Southern California will be built, but there is clearly momentum in those markets. As Enti explained, "demand must precede capacity" before any new microfactory is built. "Typically, our developers are willing to commit to a multi-year off-take. So that gives us the base load demand to be able to then respond with the factory, knowing that the factory is going to be profitable with that demand curve," he said. Last year, Reframe Systems raised $20 million in Series A funding, co-led by Eclipse and VoLo Earth Ventures. As the company expands its geographic reach and scales, the overarching goal is to substantially lower production costs by 2030 so that the Reframe Systems model becomes more widespread. "Our goal is that, by that point in time, our cost curves will have come down to less than $100 a square foot, which then allows us to be a viable solution, even for production builders and in the Sun Belt. Our stated goal is to be able to open up the production builder market. Today, we're very focused on infill housing and high-cost markets, where we also get points for being fast," he explained. The future of off-site construction. The off-site construction niche has attracted significant investment and attention in recent years, but it hasn't yet become a growing market. According to data from the National Association of Home Builders, only 3% of single-family homes delivered in 2024 used modular or panelized/pre-cut construction methods. So, what needs to change for off-site construction methods to gain more market share? Enti described Reframe System's mass customization capabilities as a competitive edge that others in the industry should take note of. The company's system is adaptable for multifamily housing, single-family homes, townhomes, ADUs and disaster-relief housing. "Broadly, from a capability standpoint, we need off-site companies to further embrace the fact that this is a mass customization problem and not a mass production problem. Something like that requires folks to move away from assembly lines and think more about matrix manufacturing and distributed work cells," Enti explained. On the policy side, Enti notes, there are some strong tailwinds. Government authorities are allowing third parties to handle not just factory inspections but also local permits and approvals, which would make permitting far more predictable. Federal policies such as the Road to Housing Act are also enabling more suitable financing approaches for factory-built housing. 26 Apr, 06

Robotics & Automation News
Mar 31st, 2026
Reframe Systems installs robotic-built modular unit as sales hub for Boston innovation center.

Reframe Systems installs robotic-built modular unit as sales hub for Boston innovation center. Discover more Heavy industry consulting Reframe Systems, the Massachusetts-based physical AI company innovating homebuilding with robotic microfactories, has partnered with Cabot, Cabot & Forbes (CC&F), a specialist in transit-oriented development for Greater Boston's new economy workers, to deploy a Reframe unit as the on-site marketing and sales office for The Bolt, a 180,000 SF innovation and manufacturing center currently under construction in Woburn along the New Boston Corridor. The 554-square-foot Reframe unit, delivered and installed on-site at The Bolt, is serving as a high-end sales and leasing hub for CC&F during The Bolt's construction period, which is expected to conclude in Q2 2027. The unit's interior fixtures and finishes are designed to mirror the quality and aesthetic of The Bolt itself, giving prospective tenants a tangible, immersive experience of the development before a single lease is signed. Once The Bolt reaches occupancy, the Reframe unit will be repurposed as an accessory dwelling unit, giving the unit a second life as permanent housing. Designed as a full-scale prototype for The Bolt, the modular unit mirrors the metal panels, window colors, and finishes of the main building, serving as a "mini-me" of the larger project. Discover more Industry investment insights Sensors for automation Textiles & Nonwovens Its interior includes a conference room, kitchenette, bathroom, and flexible office or bedroom space, allowing CC&F to test materials, workflows, and finishes before scaling construction, enabling faster delivery of flexible space and adaptation to new uses over time. This kind of dual-purpose, community-embedded deployment is central to Reframe's philosophy. The company's agile, localized fabrication centers launch in as few as 100 days and use physical AI and robotics to deliver site-customized, resilient homes 3x faster than traditional construction. Each local fabrication center is designed to serve the community it's built in, reducing transportation emissions, accelerating delivery timelines, and creating local skilled jobs. The beginning of something bigger. The partnership marks the first time a physical AI homebuilder has been embedded directly into a major commercial real estate development in Greater Boston, a signal of how the lines between housing innovation and commercial development are beginning to converge. "The Bolt was designed to attract the most innovative companies in the world, so it only made sense that the very first structure on site reflected that same standard," said Jay Doherty, CEO of Cabot, Cabot & Forbes. "Reframe is at the forefront of how homes and buildings will be made, and this partnership is a natural extension of everything The Bolt stands for." "CC&F represents exactly the kind of partner we seek out, developers who don't just build for today but are actively shaping what comes next," said Vikas Enti, co-founder and CEO of Reframe Systems. "The Bolt is a landmark project and being here from the ground up is a reflection of our shared belief that innovation in the built environment starts long before a building is complete." The Bolt: the future of innovation along the New Boston Corridor. The Bolt, which broke ground on November 6, 2025, is part of CC&F's landmark $400 million investment in the redevelopment of the former Industriplex Superfund site adjacent to the Anderson Regional Transportation Center, one of Greater Boston's most strategically located transit hubs, with direct access via the MBTA Commuter Rail, Amtrak Downeaster, and Routes 93 and 95/128. When complete, The Bolt is expected to create 300 jobs and accommodate tenants across a spectrum of high-growth industries. CC&F's investment in the area also includes Emblem 120, a 289-unit luxury multifamily housing development, and Zero New Boston, a proposed 250-unit multifamily project, together building out one of the most ambitious transit-oriented communities in the region.

Robotics & Automation News
Aug 28th, 2025
Reframe Systems raises $20 million to scale prefabricated construction 'microfactories'

Reframe Systems, a start-up utilizing physical AI to tackle the housing crisis, has raised $20 million in Series A funding co-led by Eclipse and VoLo Earth Ventures with support from MassMutual Catalyst Funds, Cubit Capital, Planetary Health at RA Capital Management, Saga Ventures, and Nor'easter Ventures.

Business Wire
Aug 28th, 2025
Ex-Amazon Robotics Leaders at Reframe Systems Raise $20M to Scale Microfactories to Tackle America’s Housing Crisis

Reframe Systems, a start-up utilizing physical AI to tackle the housing crisis, today announced $20M in Series A funding co-led by Eclipse and VoLo Earth Ven...

CityBiz
Aug 26th, 2025
Reframe Systems Raises $20M In Series A Co-led By Eclipse and VoLo Earth Ventures

Reframe Systems, a start-up utilizing physical AI to tackle the housing crisis, today announced $20M in Series A funding co-led by Eclipse and VoLo Earth Ventures with support from MassMutual Catalyst Funds, Cubit Capital, Planetary Health at RA Capital Management, Saga Ventures, and Nor'easter Ventures.