Aseon Labs, a Redwood City, California startup, is working on a solution to reduce wasted miles and keep driverless cars moving. The company is building parking-space-sized robotic service pods that can clean, charge, inspect, and reset driverless cars closer to where riders need them.
How it Works
These pods, called modular ‘reset pods,’ are designed to fit within a single parking space and require no permanent construction. They use cameras to inspect robotaxis, robotic arms to clean the interior, and can retrieve lost items from the cabin. The pods can also handle vehicle reset operations, data synchronization, recalibration, and lost-and-found handling.
The idea behind these pods is to bring the depot closer to the robotaxi, reducing the need for empty driving and keeping driverless cars on the road. Aseon Labs plans to place these pods within roughly one mile of where robotaxis operate, which could make servicing up to 15 times closer to the areas where riders are waiting.
Implications and Challenges
While the concept of robotaxi pit stops may seem convenient, it also raises questions about where these big boxes should be placed. Cities and neighborhoods will need to weigh the trade-offs, considering factors such as congestion, noise, power use, and appearance. The pods may reduce empty robotaxi trips, but they will also become a new piece of street infrastructure, requiring rules and regulations.
Aseon Labs has raised $10 million in seed funding and plans to build five prototypes. The company is talking with autonomous vehicle operators, EV charging network providers, and commercial real estate partners, with early pilot deployments starting to take shape.
Original reporting: Fox News (HLL/CB) — read the source article.