
Factory as the product.
The Aalo Gigawatt factory is a product as much as the Aalo Pod itself. Producing 1 GW/y per 1,000,000 sqft, Aalo factories unlock nuclear power deployment at scale.
Traditional nuclear treats each plants as a bespoke construction project, resulting in cost and schedule overruns.
Nuclear needs a new approach.
We call it an extra-modular reactor (XMR). The whole power plant, not just the core, is factory-built in shipping-container-sized modules.
On site, you connect fluid, power, and signal lines between modules.
Construction takes days, not years.
We take the approach used by the companies that produce things at civilization scale - cars, jet engines, rockets.
Design for manufacturing. Standardize modules. Build them in a factory. Ship them on trucks. Assemble on site. Then do it again, and again, and again.

Vertical Integration is key.
We use the factory to vertically integrate when the supply chain is too slow, too expensive, or too low volume. This gives us full control over cost and schedule.
For hyperscalers
The factory unlocks certainty on speed and availability of power.
For states and governments
The factory creates jobs, boosts the economy, and delivers energy independence.

Gigawatt Factory, in 3 Phases.


40 000
Located in Austin, Texas. The first advanced-reactor manufacturing line in the world. Module fabrication, reactor assembly, sodium systems, QA, all under one roof. NQA-1 certified by the Department of Energy after a four-day audit against eighteen requirements.
Vertical interation of critical components to unlock production of hundreds of megawatts per year. Automation of welding, quality inspection, and more.
Expand to multiple GW of Aalo Pod production per year. Further vertical integration of key components in the supply chain, to prepare for global scale.
The entire power plant is modular. Not just the reactor.
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Aalo's first reactor
was built in eight months.


6 months
To set up the 40,000 sqft Austin Pilot factory. Operational today.
2026
Procurement for Aalo's first Gigawatt Factory has already begun.
Most nuclear companies are design firms. They send their drawings to dozens of fabricators, and hope the parts arrive on time and fit together properly.
We chose a different path. We weld our own vessels. We build our own module scaffolds. We fabricate our own fuel assemblies. We write our own control systems. The 10% we don't make comes from a 127-supplier network we built across the United States -- no unobtainium, nothing on critical path that we don't control.
The first new reactor building at Idaho National Laboratory in fifty years was finished in thirty-six days. The Critical Test Reactor was assembled in under four weeks. We didn't beat those timelines by working faster on a paper design. We beat them by being a company that builds things.
Our goal?
To enable the West
to deploy one gigawatt of nuclear capacity by 2030.



