Serve Robotics has announced a pilot partnership with Wing Aviation to expand the range of its autonomous food delivery without requiring restaurants to install new equipment to accommodate drone pickups.
Serve, which was spun out of the app-based delivery company Postmates in 2021, has been making Uber Eats food deliveries in Los Angeles for a few years now, using robots that look like autonomous shopping carts. Serve says its delivery robots can be a safer alternative to cars and help reduce traffic congestion as they operate primarily on sidewalks. Since they have a top speed of around six miles per hour, there should be little to no risk to pedestrians. But that approach also limits the robotās ability to deliver food in a timely manner.
In addition, although Serve says its robots have a range of up to 25 miles while carrying 50 pounds of food, half of the delivery runs it makes in Los Angeles are āwithin two miles of a restaurant,ā according to Dr. Ali Kashani, Serveās CEO and cofounder.
The pilot partnership with Wing, which is owned by Googleās parent company Alphabet, is an attempt to expand that delivery range to a six-mile radius using a robot-to-drone multimodal delivery solution. Last year, Wing introduced its Wing Delivery Network, which includes AutoLoader stations where deliveries are picked up by its autonomous drones. Retailers can choose to install these AutoLoader stations in their parking lots, but thatās not an option for smaller restaurants.
The pilot partnership will initially roll out in Dallas, where āselect Wing deliveriesā will be picked up from a restaurant by one of Serveās delivery robots. The robot will then bring it to a Wing AutoLoader station āa few blocks away,ā according to Serve, where a drone will complete the delivery. Since Wingās drones travel at up to 65mph and arenāt slowed by traffic lights or road congestion, the partnership will potentially bring a best-of-both-worlds approach to autonomous food delivery.
The service is expected to start within the next few months and will also help Wing expand its drone delivery services to merchants located in areas where space is limited and who donāt want to hire extra staff to act as go-betweens.
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