
Adam is an AI workspace that connects CAD, PLM, and supplier tools for hardware teams.
Adam is an AI workspace built for hardware engineering teams. It connects to the CAD, PLM, supplier, and collaboration tools teams already use—including Onshape, Fusion, SolidWorks, McMaster-Carr, Digi-Key, Google Drive, Notion, Slack, and email—reading geometry, bills of materials, drawings, and revisions in real time.
Users delegate recurring work through natural-language requests and receive finished outputs such as branched model edits, reconciled BOMs, updated drawings, renders, and drafted RFQs. The workspace also includes a text-to-CAD editor that generates parametric designs from prompts and exports files ready for 3D printing.
Adam targets the CAD and product-lifecycle-management software market for hardware teams, aiming to reduce repetitive engineering work with AI agents. The company plans to expand from individual makers and prosumers into enterprise mechanical-engineering teams.
Its initial focus is a copilot integrated with professional-grade CAD workflows, beginning with Onshape, which brought CAD to the cloud. Adam expects AI models to reshape CAD workflows the same way cloud-native tools did over the past decade.
Adam integrates directly with the systems hardware teams already operate, including Onshape, Fusion, SolidWorks, McMaster-Carr, Digi-Key, Google Drive, and Notion, so it works without migration or exported copies of IP. It handles end-to-end workflows from geometry to BOMs to vendor emails, not only text-to-3D generation.
The product keeps customer geometry, drawings, and correspondence in the customer's own accounts and PLM, with no model training on customer data, isolated encrypted workspaces, and enterprise options for SSO, audit logging, and admin scope controls.
Adam is an early-stage startup moving from a consumer-facing text-to-CAD tool into enterprise CAD workflows, so it must prove reliability and depth for professional engineers. Established CAD incumbents and emerging AI copilots such as MecAgent compete in the same space, and Adam's enterprise offering is still being tested by early users.
The jump from helping individual creators generate printable models to supporting daily mechanical-engineering work is significant. The company is still hiring AI and engineering talent to give models the right context for reasoning in 3D space.
Adam offers a free tier with daily refresh credits, a $40-per-month Starter plan, a $200-per-month Pro plan, and a $1,000-per-month Max plan. Credits are consumed based on workstream complexity, connected context, tool use, and generated outputs.
Team and Enterprise plans add shared workstreams, pooled usage, approvals, administration, governance, and rollout support; Enterprise pricing routes to a sales conversation. The pricing structure is product copy until finalized by the team.