
Sensory Robotics Launches UL-Certified 3D Virtual Robot Safety System
Quick Answer
Sensory Robotics has launched its UL-certified SR-1 3D Virtual Robot Safety System, designed for fenceless human-robot collaboration.
Quick Take
Sensory Robotics has launched its UL-certified SR-1 3D Virtual Robot Safety System, designed for fenceless human-robot collaboration. This innovative system was unveiled at Automate 2026 in Chicago, aiming to enhance safety in workplaces where humans and robots interact without physical barriers.
Key Points
- The SR-1 system enables safe collaboration between humans and robots without physical barriers.
- It received UL certification, ensuring compliance with safety standards.
- Unveiled at Automate 2026, it targets industries seeking advanced safety solutions.
- The technology aims to improve efficiency and reduce workplace accidents.
- Sensory Robotics focuses on enhancing human-robot interaction in various environments.
📖 Reader Mode
~4 min readSensory Robotics Launches UL-Certified 3D Virtual Robot Safety System
Cincinnati safety startup debuts its SR-1 fenceless human and robot collaboration at Automate 2026 in Chicago
CINCINNATI, Ohio — June 10, 2026 — Sensory Robotics, an industrial safety startup company modernizing how people and robots work together, will introduce its SR-1 system — which uses 3D time-of-flight sensing to build a live, invisible safety zone around an existing industrial robot — at Automate 2026 in Chicago, June 22-25.
The system watches the space continuously, letting the robot run at full speed when the area is clear, slowing it down as a person approaches, and stopping it instantly if someone or something gets too close. The result is that people and fast, heavy robots can work in the same space without the cages and fences that have defined factory floors for decades.
Removing Safety Fences Through Certification
Physical safety fencing consumes valuable floor space and forces a choice between speed and proximity. Slow-moving collaborative robots designed to be safe near people solved the proximity problem but gave up the speed and payload that production lines depend on.
The harder barrier was never just engineering — it was approval. Regulated manufacturers cannot deploy a fenceless system without independent certification, no matter how well the technology performs, because insurance guidelines and regulatory compliance hinge on worker safety. Safety requirements are a large part of why the fence line has stayed in place.
After years of effectively demonstrating its worth, the SR-1 system has been certified under UL 1740 (cULus) and validated to Performance Level d, Category 3 under ISO 13849, with a PFHd of 1.73 × 10-7, a level of safety certification that is notoriously difficult to achieve and that regulated manufacturers require before deploying any fenceless system.
"This kind of certification is one of the hardest things to achieve in our industry, and that is the point," said Mark Gagas, chief operating officer of Sensory Robotics. "It is what lets a regulated manufacturer trust a fenceless system enough to put it on a real production line. The milestone is not the paperwork. It is the confidence it gives the people who work next to these machines every day."
See Unfenced Robot Demos at Automate
Sensory Robotics was founded by CEO Chris Edwards and CTO Tristan Fogt, two technology veterans who arrived at industrial safety from an unlikely starting point: virtual reality gaming. The company has grown up inside Cincinnati's research and innovation ecosystem and will introduce the SR-1 system at Automate 2026, offering live, unfenced robot demonstrations attendees can watch on a large projector screen.
"Industrial robots were never designed to work next to people. They were powerful machines built to be isolated," said Chris Edwards, CEO of Sensory Robotics. "What has changed is that the industry now has both the technology and, just as importantly, the certified proof that people and robots can share a space safely."
About Sensory Robotics
Sensory Robotics is a Cincinnati-based industrial safety company modernizing how people and robots work together. Its flagship SR-1 system uses 3D sensing to create live safety zones around industrial robots, enabling fast, powerful machines to operate safely beside human workers without physical fencing. Sensory Robotics is a corporate partner of the University of Cincinnati 1819 Innovation Hub. Learn more at sensoryrobotics.com.
Featured Product
Midwest Motion Products is a leading provider of robust and reliable Motion Control Products.
MMP specializes in supplying high-quality Brushed & Brushless DC Motors & Gearmotors for Robotics and Automation Equipment with a wide range of motor windings and gear ratios. With an impressive track record of more than 8,000 released DC Gearmotors designs and over 2,000,000 individual part numbers, we are renowned for our ability to handle large-scale orders. Due to our huge on-hand inventory, we are also well known for lightning-fast delivery of our standard products. We take pride in our dedicated customer service and our team of knowledgeable sales and engineering experts who are ready to assist you with custom design solutions tailored to your specific application. Additionally, we also offer a wide range of complimentary products, such as DC Motor Controls, DC Linear Actuators, AC-DC power Supplies, and DC Servo Amplifiers and others.
— Originally published at roboticstomorrow.com
Want this in your inbox every morning?
Daily brief at your local 8am — bilingual EN/中文, free.
More from Robotics Tomorrow
See more →
Aptiv to Deliver Production-Ready Edge AI with Long-Term Support with NVIDIA
Aptiv and NVIDIA are collaborating to enhance the NVIDIA Jetson platform, including the upcoming Jetson Thor, to create commercially supported, production-ready edge AI systems. This partnership aims to advance intelligent systems for various applications, ensuring long-term support and reliability.