Saudi Arabia has opened MENA’s first humanoid-robotics showroom in Riyadh, marking a new milestone for the region’s automation and AI ecosystem. The facility, known as the Humanoid Lounge, is a joint initiative between UK-based robotics firm Humanoid and QSS AI & Robotics, the Saudi industrial automation company building large-scale robotics capability.
The showroom features live demonstrations of humanoid robots, including the HMND 01 Alpha Wheeled, recognised as the UK’s first industrial humanoid robot and developed in seven months. Visitors can interact with the robots through a “talk to a robot” interface, observe teleoperation sessions and explore real commercial use cases across manufacturing, logistics, energy, retail and public infrastructure.
QSS confirmed that up to 10,000 humanoid units are planned for pre-order over the next five years. Local assembly will take place at the upcoming Riyadh Robotics Factory, which is being built to support production at scale.
A shift from experimental robotics to real industrial deployment
The Riyadh showroom signals a new phase for robotics in the region. Until now, most access to humanoid hardware in the Gulf has been limited to labs, pilots or remote demonstrations. A physical showroom changes this. Companies can test real robots, understand capabilities and explore integration options without importing prototypes.
The technology angle is central. The humanoid robots on display support simulation, teleoperation and semi-autonomous functions. They are built to handle tasks such as warehouse movement, inspection, customer service, industrial support and infrastructure monitoring. With QSS planning to assemble units locally, Saudi Arabia moves from early adoption to regional production.
The project aligns with national goals to modernise industry, strengthen productivity and position the Kingdom as a leader in AI and automation across the Gulf.
The industries that stand to benefit first
Manufacturers, logistics operators, energy companies and public-sector agencies in Saudi Arabia will have the earliest access. System integrators and robotics developers gain a real environment for testing, adaptation and training, something that has been missing in the regional ecosystem.
The broader MENA tech community may also benefit as the showroom becomes a focal point for robotics education, demonstrations and applied research. Workforce-development programmes could evolve as industries prepare for greater automation.
What comes next for the robotics rollout
QSS is preparing for large-scale assembly at the Riyadh Robotics Factory, with initial production units expected to roll out in phases. Pilot deployments in warehouses, industrial plants and commercial settings will follow.
Key signals to watch include purchase agreements from major Saudi companies, early deployment performance and interest from neighbouring markets. If successful, the Riyadh showroom could become the anchor for a wider regional robotics rollout.







