Immensa Secures Funding to Revolutionise Spare Parts with On-Demand 3D Printing

3 min
Saudi deeptech Immensa secured new funding led by DFDF and Global Ventures.
Its platform turns warehouses into “digital libraries” for on-demand 3D-printed parts.
Industrial operators can cut clutter, delays and long-tied-up capital.
Funds will expand its digital inventory, partner network and global footprint.
Backing signals Dubai’s push into deeptech and supply chain digitisation.
Saudi deeptech company Immensa has secured fresh investment in a growth round led by the Dubai Future District Fund (DFDF) and Global Ventures, with participation from existing backers. The new capital is set to fuel the company’s international expansion and sharpen its digital platform for industrial spare parts, while strengthening advanced manufacturing capabilities in the UAE.
If you’ve been following industrial innovation in the region, you’ll know Immensa has been quietly building something quite practical. Its digital platform allows industrial operators—particularly in oil and gas and energy—to move away from bulky, traditional inventories. Instead of stockpiling physical spare parts, companies can digitise components and produce them on demand through a global network of 3D printing facilities. In simple terms, it turns warehouses into digital libraries. Less clutter, fewer delays, and, ideally, lower costs.
I remember speaking to a founder at a regional energy event who said managing spare parts across multiple sites was “a bit of a nightmare”. Shelves full of rarely used items, capital tied up for years. Solutions like Immensa’s would have sounded almost too good to be true back then. Now, they’re becoming increasingly mainstream. And believe it or not, the economics of additive manufacturing—another way of saying industrial 3D printing—are starting to make solid business sense, not just innovation theatre.
The new funding will help Immensa expand its digital inventory library, grow its partner network, and scale the platform’s applications globally. That means more certified parts available on demand, and a wider manufacturing footprint to serve operators in different markets. The company had previously raised around $7 million in a Series A round back in 2022, so this latest round marks another step in its steady growth journey.
That said, the bigger picture is just as interesting. The involvement of DFDF reflects Dubai’s continued push to position itself as a hub for industrial innovation and supply chain digitisation. On the flip side, it also signals that deeptech—often seen as complex and capital-heavy—is gaining more structured support in the region. I reckon this is spot on. For MENA to compete globally in advanced industries, these are the sorts of bets that need to be made, even if they take time to pay off.
For readers at Arageek who care about the nuts and bolts of entrepreneurship, this story is another reminder that not all startups are building apps or chasing consumer trends. Some are rethinking how entire supply chains operate, quietly but decisively. It’s not always flashy, and scaling industrial tech can be messy and capital intensive, but when it works, it can reshape sectors in a very real way.
Immensa’s latest raise may not grab headlines like a flashy AI unicorn, but in the world of oil, gas and heavy industry, solving spare-parts logistics is no small feat. And if the company executes well on its global plans, this round could prove to be more than just growth capital—it could be a defining move in its evolution.
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