Our story
RoboSynthAI was founded to close the gap between robotics research papers and the loading docks, hospital corridors and collaboration floors where service robots actually work.
Based at 1420 Blair Drive, Suite 305 in Ottawa, Ontario, RoboSynthAI operates a multi-studio campus dedicated to service robotics research, AMR pilot staging and healthcare robotics lab replication. Our name reflects our core discipline: synthesizing hardware platforms, navigation software, facility APIs and human workflows into coherent deployment programmes that facility operators can own long after our engagement ends.
We are deliberately not a marketing agency, web design studio or general IT outsourcing firm. Every team member has a background in robotics engineering, simulation science or clinical technology integration. That focus allows us to speak credibly with biomedical engineering departments, warehouse operations managers and municipal innovation offices across Canada — always with the humility to say when a robotics deployment is premature for a given facility.
Our Blair Drive campus includes a motion planning workshop, healthcare robotics lab bay, simulation review theatre and Ottawa contact studio where clients co-design pilot protocols. The campus sits within Ottawa's east-end technology corridor, accessible from Highway 417 and well served by OC Transpo routes for visiting teams who prefer not to drive.
RoboSynthAI is registered in Ontario under business number BN 852047918ON0001. We align our data handling practices with PIPEDA and maintain documented privacy procedures for all client telemetry and floor-plan data received during engagements.
Our research philosophy emphasizes reproducibility. Simulation scenarios, navigation parameter sets and training curricula we deliver are version-controlled and transferable. We want your internal teams to understand and extend what we build — not remain dependent on opaque black-box configurations.
Former NSERC postdoctoral fellow in mobile manipulation. Elena directs simulation review standards and healthcare robotics lab protocols at Blair Drive. She speaks regularly at Canadian robotics symposia on service robot safety culture.