Insider Brief
- Hellbender raised $12.5 million in seed funding co-led by Magarac Venture Partners and Veredas Partners, with participation from Mana Ventures, Gaingels, Sum VC and Active Angels Network, to scale edge AI platforms and manufacturing.
- The funding will support growth across product development, hiring and production as Hellbender expands from custom engineering work into broader commercialization of AI hardware platforms.
- Hellbender also introduced three AI camera systems for edge computing and computer vision applications, with pilot deployments underway across utility, retail and assisted-living environments.
Hellbender has raised $12.5 million in seed funding to expand deployment of its edge AI platforms and scale manufacturing of hardware designed for robotics and autonomous systems.
The round was co-led by Magarac Venture Partners and Veredas Partners, with participation from Mana Ventures, Gaingels, Sum VC and Active Angels Network. Hellbender said the funding will support hiring across product development, growth and hardware manufacturing as demand increases for AI systems that process data directly at the edge rather than relying on cloud infrastructure.
Based in Pittsburgh, the company develops hardware and perception systems for robotics and industrial applications. According to Hellbender, it is now expanding beyond custom engineering work and moving toward wider commercialization of its AI platforms.
As part of that effort, Hellbender introduced a new lineup of AI-enabled camera systems designed for applications including robotics, industrial monitoring and computer vision. The company said early pilot deployments are underway with customers including a utility provider, retail operators and assisted-living facilities.
Jay Katarincic, partner at Magarac Venture Partners, said Hellbender has become an important player in Pittsburgh’s robotics sector and is emerging as a growing force in U.S.-based AI hardware. The firm noted that Hellbender stands out for providing an end-to-end approach spanning design, engineering and scaled manufacturing within the United States.
“As AI and robotics move from research to real-world deployment, the need for secure, onshore engineering and production has never been more important,” Katarincic added. “Hellbender is uniquely positioned at the center of that shift. Their ability to nearly double revenue each year since founding reflects both strong execution and accelerating demand. We’re thrilled to lead this round and support their continued growth.”
Alongside the funding announcement, Hellbender introduced three AI camera systems designed for edge computing and computer vision applications. According to the company, the lineup includes:
- Hellbender Stereo Camera — A system combining depth sensing, AI processing and onboard computing designed to operate in low-light or difficult environments. The company said it is currently being tested with a major utility provider.
- Hellbender Vine Camera System — A distributed monitoring system supporting up to 64 connected cameras for applications such as retail, inventory management and industrial monitoring. According to Hellbender, pilots are underway with a national convenience store chain and assisted-living facilities.
- Hellbender Tadpole Camera — A compact AI camera intended for embedded applications, security systems and custom hardware deployments where space is limited.
Hellbender said the systems use Hailo AI accelerators and Raspberry Pi-based computing to process data locally at the edge rather than relying on cloud infrastructure.
“The market is in dire need of the edge computing solutions Hellbender is delivering,” noted Vai Viswanathan of Veredas Partners. “Developers building the next generation of autonomous and industrial systems have been severely bottlenecked by a lack of accessible, intelligent hardware. Hellbender’s new line of physical AI cameras provides the exact depth perception, orchestration, and scalable infrastructure the industry is asking for right now.”