- Early Access
- Posts
- Early Access: Ulama
Early Access: Ulama
Ulama's transformative AI is making waves in the $700B permitting industry; 20% of current fundraise already committed.



Happy Monday! Welcome back to Early Access by Coeus Collective: the newsletter where we do the sourcing and you get the deal.
Last week we told you about Curvo, an AI video call assistant taking on Cluely with a sales-specific focus. Today, for our last traditional Early Access newsletter of the year, we’re staying in the AI realm to tell you about a startup in our network that is set to revolutionize the multi-trillion dollar construction industry: Ulama.
Tyce and the Ulama team is one we’ve been watching for a while since he won our Coeus Collective Pitch Showcase Presented by Seedlegals with support from J.P. Morgan Innovation Economy during New York Tech Week by a16z this past June.
Ulama is now currently fundraising and we’re excited to tell you all about the company. Alright, let’s get to it!


Ulama’s product in action.
There is an ongoing legislative debate about what the government’s role in homebuilding should be. Subsidies, zoning reform, tax incentives, and public private partnerships tend to dominate the conversation. But underneath these policy discussions sits a far more operational constraint that determines whether housing actually gets built at all: permitting.
In a world shaped by a seemingly permanent housing shortage, delays are often not caused by a lack of capital or demand. Instead, they emerge from the friction between architectural design and regulatory compliance. Building codes are complex, vary by jurisdiction, and continue to expand in scope. Today, most compliance review remains manual, slow, and reactive, forcing architects and builders into costly revision cycles after plans are already submitted.
This is the gap Ulama is designed to address.
Ulama’s core function is to automatically identify building code violations directly within an architect’s design, allowing teams to resolve issues before submitting plans for permit approval. Rather than waiting weeks or months for feedback from reviewers, architects can design with compliance in mind from the very beginning.
By tightening the feedback loop between design and regulation, Ulama can significantly reduce permitting timelines, one of the most overlooked constraints in the global housing supply chain. At scale, faster approvals do more than save time and money. They unlock the ability to build more housing, more predictably, in cities and regions facing acute shortages.