One Studio. Both disciplines. No partition.

We built Robototec on the premise that graphic design and engineering share the same root problem: making something that works when it meets the world.

Branding & EngineeringDesign
together

Most studios pick a lane. We didn't. Robototec handles brand identity, robotics builds, 3D prototyping, and technical training from a single integrated team — the same thinking that shapes a logo informs how a prototype gets machined.

We serve branding clients, engineering teams, educators, and corporates. Not as separate practices — as one studio that reads across all of them.

Industrial design sketches of modern kitchen appliances including blenders and storage containers.
Industrial design sketches of modern kitchen appliances including blenders and storage containers.
Close-up of a man's hands sketching mechanical diagrams on drafting paper at a workbench, a 3D-printed prototype visible in the background, hard studio light casting sharp shadows across the paper surface, tools and pencils nearby
Close-up of a man's hands sketching mechanical diagrams on drafting paper at a workbench, a 3D-printed prototype visible in the background, hard studio light casting sharp shadows across the paper surface, tools and pencils nearby

Work is tested, not presented

I started Robototec because I kept watching good ideas fail at the handoff — design handed to engineers who never briefed it, builds that looked nothing like the concept. We closed that gap by refusing to split the team.

Every project leaves the studio only after it has survived a real test. That standard applies whether we're printing a prototype or finalizing a brand identity.

Three things we don't negotiate

Integrated by default

Outcome over output

Visible craft, always

Design and engineering share a brief, a team, and a deadline. No handoffs. No translation loss between the sketch and the build.

We measure delivery by what performs in the field — a brand identity that holds on packaging, a prototype that survives the first stress test.

Process is not hidden. Clients see the work mid-build — the draft, the model, the test run — because that's where the real decisions happen.