M A G I S X
Construction. Under control.
Building a home can be inconsistent. But construction cannot afford to be.
Small inconsistencies become delays. Design intent gets compromised. Manual processes introduce variation, even with skilled teams. Over time, these small issues add up.
Magis X brings control to the process.
Still Magis. With Robots.
Magis X introduces a suite of construction technologies that will be deployed in phases. The first is 3D concrete printing, which allows structural walls to be produced directly from a digital model with a high level of dimensional accuracy.
Robotic systems handle the repetitive work that benefits from precision. Magis Men remain responsible for the rest of the home — the judgment, coordination, and craftsmanship that construction still requires.

Already Happening Worldwide
Homes and buildings using 3D concrete printing have been completed across Europe, the United States, Asia and the Middle East. Magis X brings this technology to the Philippines through systems developed by COBOD, a platform supported by global partners including PERI, Holcim, Cemex, and GE.
What doesn't change?
The architect.
The engineering.
The building code.
Magis X doesn't change the house. It improves how it gets built.

Built for Architects
Architecture often asks construction to do things it struggles to deliver.
Ambitious structures. Complex curves. Precise geometries. Robotic construction allows these ideas to be executed more faithfully, resulting in fewer compromises between architectural drawings and reality.

The material. Finally measurable.
On most sites, concrete is tested through occasional samples sent to a lab. Magis X monitors it in real time.
Embedded sensors track curing, moisture, temperature and strength directly in the structure, not in a lab. This allows the team to see how our concrete performs as it sets, measuring the material we actually build with.

Simon Klint Bergh, co-founder of Cobod, with Paolo Periquet during the scale build of Koi.
Vytaustas Naslensas, Gino Cariño, Maye Yao-Co Say and Paolo Periquet
Koi, at center, designed by Dominic Galicia and Tina Periquet. Rising 2H 2026
Embedded sensors monitoring concrete performance