Skip to page content

Togal AI raises $5 million to make construction estimates more efficient


eMerge Winner 2
Togal.AI CEO Patrick Murphy pitches at the 2022 eMerge Americas Startup Competition
Togal.AI

Togal AI, a startup that uses artificial intelligence to automate the construction estimate process, raised $5 million in a pre-seed funding round backed by Miami's Coastal Construction, Tampa-based Florida Funders and other investors.

The Miami startup uses machine learning to automatically measure the square footage of a space with 97% accuracy to help contractors like electricians and plumbers make estimates. That work is typically done manually in the industry, a process that can take weeks.

With Togal AI's software, room measurements can be completed in less than 10 seconds. That makes it possible for general contractors and subcontractors to respond to more construction proposals and bid on more jobs.

It's a huge departure from the estimating process that founder and CEO Patrick Murphy said he learned from his grandfather 25 years ago.

“We used rulers, rollers, highlighters and a calculator to perform take-offs. Then the industry moved to computers, where we manually used a mouse to measure each space," Murphy said. "It’s beyond exciting to now bring AI to the industry."

Murphy started Togal AI in 2019 with seed funding from Coastal Construction, which was founded by his father, Thomas P. Murphy. Before that, he represented Florida's 18th congressional district from 2013 to 2017.

Togal AI now works with 25 contractors, with clients that include Stiles, Total Flooring, Coastal Construction and Clark Construction. Last year it won the grand prize at the 2022 eMerge Americas Startup Showcase, where it snagged a $420,000 investment.

The construction industry was forced to innovate during the Covid-19 pandemic due to supply and labor shortages, Murphy said. That created more demand for less labor-intensive solutions, such as Togal AI's estimating software. The global construction technology industry captured $5.38 billion from venture capital and private equity investors in 2022, according to a report from venture capital firm Cemex Ventures. More than 40% of all construction tech investment dollars went to ventures headquartered in the United States.

"Construction is at an inflection point and I believe the next decade will be transformative," Murphy said.

Florida Funders Partner Saxon Baum said Togal AI employed one of the most innovative applications of artificial intelligence technology seen by the firm's partners. The startup has a $50 million valuation after the pre-seed round, the firm reports.

“[Murphy's] deep, firsthand knowledge of the construction industry’s ins and outs make him the ideal founder Florida Funders wants to back," he said.


For more stories like this one, sign up for Miami Inno newsletters from the South Florida Business Journal and the American Inno network.


Keep Digging

News
Profiles


SpotlightMore

Novo co-founders Tyler McIntyre and Michael Rangel
See More
Maggie Vo, Fuel Venture Capital
See More
Inside ADT's Innovation House in Boca Raton
See More
Via American Inno
See More

Want to stay ahead of who & what is next? Sent twice a week, the Beat is your definitive look at South Florida’s innovation economy, offering news, analysis & more on the people, companies & ideas driving your city forward. Follow The Beat

Sign Up